History in Structure

Coach House, Bannachra

A Category C Listed Building in Cowal, Argyll and Bute

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Coordinates

Latitude: 56.0037 / 56°0'13"N

Longitude: -4.8983 / 4°53'53"W

OS Eastings: 219377

OS Northings: 682764

OS Grid: NS193827

Mapcode National: GBR 06.TPLJ

Mapcode Global: WH2M1.QCNB

Plus Code: 9C8Q2432+FM

Entry Name: Coach House, Bannachra

Listing Name: Blairmore, Shore Road, Bannachra, Including Coach House, Boundary Walls and Gatepiers

Listing Date: 4 May 2006

Category: C

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 398434

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB50424

Building Class: Cultural

Also known as: Including Boundary Walls And Gatepiers, Bannachra

ID on this website: 200398434

Location: Dunoon and Kilmun

County: Argyll and Bute

Electoral Ward: Cowal

Parish: Dunoon And Kilmun

Traditional County: Argyllshire

Tagged with: Villa Carriage house Architectural structure

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Description

Loch Lomond And Trossachs National Park Planning Authority

Bannachra (1861) is one of the better examples of villas on the Shore Road remaining in substantially unaltered condition and with its original coach house The house has a number of decorative features, such as the corbelled and pierced stone parapets. Bannachra, a rectangular-plan 3-bay 2-storey villa with a gabled front, also makes a significant contribution to the collection of buildings along the shore.

The central entrance to Bannachra is in a basket-arched doorway with sandstone voussoirs. Above this is a tudor-arched window in a half-dormer. To the left of the door there is a tripartite window, above which is a false parapet with pierced quatrefoil stonework. On the first floor is a round-arched window. The gable on the right which, unusually, does not project from the front of the house, has a canted bay on the ground floor, a pierced quatrefoil parapet and a hood-moulded tripartite window on the 1st floor. A greenhouse is attached to the S elevation. To the rear of the house is a single-storey piended 'roof projection.

The house appears to have survived substantially as on the 1st edition O.S. map. On the 2nd edition map there is an extension to the rear of the coach house, but this appears to have been removed since. A window on the S elevation has recently been converted to form a door.

Interior: access to the interior was not possible at the time of the resurvey (2004).

Materials: painted rubble with sandstone dressings. Graded slate gabled roof. Stone chimneys and polygonal clay cans. Timber sash and case windows, predominantly plate glass, but with lying-pane glazing to the sides

Coach House, Boundary Walls: to the side of the house is a 2-storey coach house, typical of those found in the locality, with projecting voussoirs on the depressed coach arch as on the main house and a round-headed window on the first floor. The house is surrounded by rubble boundary walls, with a cast iron gate on square-plan stone gatepiers.

Statement of Interest

Built in 1861 for Arthur Anderson, a Glasgow Wine and Spirit merchant (Information courtesy of the owner, 2004). The settlement of the W shore of Loch Long was a continuation from the development of Kilmun and Strone, which began in the late 1820s when marine engineer David Napier feued a three mile stretch of land from Campbell of Monzie and ran daily steamer connections to Glasgow. Blairmore Pier opened in 1855, encouraging development northwards (Walker, 2000, 147).

External Links

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