Английская Википедия:Dunphail House

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Dunphail House is an Italianate country house in Moray, Scotland. It was designed by William Henry Playfair for Charles Lennox Cumming-Bruce, and was completed in 1829. Originally designated a Category B listed building in 1971, it was upgraded to Category A in 1987, and remains a privately owned residence.

History

Dunphail House was built between 1828 and 1829 according to a design by William Henry Playfair, the architect responsible for many of the neoclassical buildings in Edinburgh's New Town.[1] It was built near the site of the now-ruined Dunphail Castle[2] for Charles Lennox Cumming-Bruce,[3] a Scottish Conservative politician.

Plans for a new house on the site had already been drawn up by John Baxter in 1787, and by John Patterson from 1817-1820,[4][3] but it was Playfair's plans, which were his first commission for a country house, that were eventually executed.[3] The same year construction was completed, the nearby River Divie flooded and threatened to destroy the house, with the river bank reportedly collapsing to within a yard of the foundations.[2]

Substantial additions were made to the house in 1871 by Alexander Ross.[3][4] Electric lighting was first installed in 1883,[5] drawing power from a dynamo turned by water from the River Divie.[6] The interior plasterwork was extensively remodelled between 1928 and 1932 under the direction of John Wittet CBE,[7] president of the Inverness Architectural Association and Lord Provost of Elgin.[8] Renovation work by Ronald Phillips and Partners, sensitive to the original design, removed substantial parts of Ross's addition in 1964.[3][4]

The house was designated a category B listed building in 1971; it was upgraded to category A in 1987.[1]

Description

The building is of a rectangular Italianate design,[3] mostly of two storeys but with a three-storey tower at the west gable with a pyramidal roof.[1] The original design featured a porte-cochère frontage, which Ross removed and reattached to his own additions in 1871; the 1960s renovation work replaced Ross's frontage with the current porch, which reuses Playfair's original parapet, and features a pair of Roman Doric columns and a Neo-Georgian fanlight.[3] It is constructed of pinned rubble, with polished and tooled ashlar sandstone detailing.[7]

Aside from Wittet's plasterwork, the interior mostly dates from the 1960s renovations,[1] with little of Playfair's original work remaining other than the shape and layout of the rooms.[3]

The house remains a privately owned residence.[9]

References

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