House of Falkland designed landscape: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
"A prime and rare example of mid-19th century garden design by the collaboration of designers [[William Burn]], [[Alexander Roos]] and [[Donald Beaton]]. This was further elaborated during the 1890s, by designs in the Arts and Crafts style, by [[Robert Schultz]]. The site's interest is enhanced by its associations with the royal Palace of Falkland, with which it forms a contiguous designed landscape and a shared and related history."<ref>[http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/GDL00214 HES]. Includes detailed descriptions of the designed landscpe and its history</ref> | "A prime and rare example of mid-19th century garden design by the collaboration of designers [[William Burn]], [[Alexander Roos]] and [[Donald Beaton]]. This was further elaborated during the 1890s, by designs in the Arts and Crafts style, by [[Robert Schultz]]. The site's interest is enhanced by its associations with the royal Palace of Falkland, with which it forms a contiguous designed landscape and a shared and related history."<ref>[http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/GDL00214 HES]. Includes detailed descriptions of the designed landscpe and its history</ref> | ||
The designed landscape includes | The designed landscape includes 10 listed buildings: | ||
*[[House of Falkland]] | *[[House of Falkland]] | ||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
*[[Fish Pond Bridges]] | *[[Fish Pond Bridges]] | ||
*[[Gilderland Bridge]] | *[[Gilderland Bridge]] | ||
*[[Tunnel on path along Maspie Burn]] | |||
*[[Memorial Chapel]] | |||
*[[Temple of Decision]] | *[[Temple of Decision]] | ||
*[[Tyndall Bruce Monument]] | *[[Tyndall Bruce Monument]] |
Revision as of 11:54, 7 January 2021
The House of Falkland designed landscape is designated by Historic Environment Scotland under the "Gardens and Designed Landscapes" category (reference GDL00214).
"A prime and rare example of mid-19th century garden design by the collaboration of designers William Burn, Alexander Roos and Donald Beaton. This was further elaborated during the 1890s, by designs in the Arts and Crafts style, by Robert Schultz. The site's interest is enhanced by its associations with the royal Palace of Falkland, with which it forms a contiguous designed landscape and a shared and related history."[1]
The designed landscape includes 10 listed buildings:
- House of Falkland
- House of Falkland Stables
- East Lodge and gates
- Bridge over Mill Burn
- Fish Pond Bridges
- Gilderland Bridge
- Tunnel on path along Maspie Burn
- Memorial Chapel
- Temple of Decision
- Tyndall Bruce Monument
and two scheduled monuments: