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Latitude: 55.6779 / 55°40'40"N
Longitude: -5.4634 / 5°27'48"W
OS Eastings: 182342
OS Northings: 648147
OS Grid: NR823481
Mapcode National: GBR DFWP.XZW
Mapcode Global: WH0L2.1KN4
Plus Code: 9C7PMGHP+4J
Entry Name: Cour House
Listing Name: Cour House Saddell
Listing Date: 12 April 1978
Category: A
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 352401
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB18360
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200352401
Location: Saddell and Skipness
County: Argyll and Bute
Electoral Ward: Kintyre and the Islands
Parish: Saddell And Skipness
Traditional County: Argyllshire
Tagged with: House
1921-2. Oliver Hill, architect. Large, outstanding Arts and Crafts house in an English Mediaeval style. Two storeyed. Whinstone rubble walls and chimneys. Purbeck stone slates. Steel casement windows. Roughly symmetrical entrance front, flanked by round towers and short wings, has door to entrance lobby behind which is a large Hall. There is a Library to the East of the Hall and a long rear wing to the West. In the re-entrant angle is a terrace.
An astonishing country house designed by the English architect, Oliver Hill, for J B Gray, a shipping magnate, on the site of an old farmhouse. Hill's drawings at the RIBA include unexecuted drawings for the house by H E Clifford (who built the replacement farmhouse nearby). The house is built of grey-green whin stone, which was quarried on site and appears to grow out of the landscape, especially the entrance elevation where the roofs of low single-storey side wings contrive to give the impression that the house is rising out of the ground. The rear elevation, which faces over steeply falling ground towards the sea, has a more monumental aspect. The architectural massing and composition is vigorously well-handled and strongly influenced by the works of Lutyens, who was a family friend, with heavy battered masonry, horizontal bands of mullioned windows and a strong and varied roof line. Yet while the house is a powerful example of Arts and Crafts architecture, it also looks forward to the modernism that was to mark out Hill's career in the 1930's. While the stone slates and thick masonry give the impression of a traditional building, modern materials were also employed, such as steel window frames and cement pointing (the latter causing severe problems of water penetration). The interior is notable for its generosity of space and Arts-and-Crafts detailing. A perspective drawing of the house was commissioned from F L Griggs by Hill, and exhibited at the Royal Academy. Change of category from B to A, 25 September 2006.
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