List of listed buildings in Dores, Highland
This is a list of listed buildings in the parish of Dores in Highland, Scotland.
List
Name | Location | Date listed | Grid ref.[1] Geo-coordinates |
Notes | HB number[2] | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gorthleck House | 57°15′23″N 4°24′52″W / 57.256359°N 4.414365°W | Category C(S) | 541 | ![]() | ||
Tigh-Na-Coille (Former Free Church Of Scotland Manse) And Steading | 57°23′33″N 4°18′47″W / 57.392459°N 4.313089°W | Category B | 544 | ![]() | ||
Abersky, Old Farmhouse | 57°18′40″N 4°19′51″W / 57.311242°N 4.3308°W | Category B | 534 | ![]() | ||
Aldourie Castle | 57°24′13″N 4°19′47″W / 57.403719°N 4.329597°W | Category A | 535 | ![]() | ||
Dores Parish Church Of Scotland, Sunday School Room (Former Watch-House) Burial Ground And War Memorial Entrance | 57°23′02″N 4°19′44″W / 57.384027°N 4.32888°W | Category C(S) | 537 | ![]() | ||
Farraline House, Walled Garden | 57°15′56″N 4°22′52″W / 57.265538°N 4.381198°W | Category B | 540 | ![]() | ||
Errogie, Former United Free Church Including Boundary Walls | 57°16′16″N 4°23′05″W / 57.271204°N 4.384716°W | Category C(S) | 50029 | ![]() | ||
Errogie, Corrugated-Iron Cottage | 57°16′15″N 4°23′06″W / 57.27076°N 4.384919°W | Category C(S) | 50031 | ![]() | ||
Aldourie Castle Rustic Gate Piers | 57°24′04″N 4°19′41″W / 57.401205°N 4.328022°W | Category C(S) | 536 | ![]() | ||
Leadclune | 57°18′01″N 4°22′51″W / 57.300231°N 4.380818°W | Category C(S) | 543 | ![]() | ||
Gorthleck Mains (Old Gorthleck) | 57°15′37″N 4°24′29″W / 57.260257°N 4.407937°W | Category B | 542 | ![]() | ||
Dores Village, Drumashie Lodge (Former Church Of Scotland Manse) And Steading | 57°22′58″N 4°19′50″W / 57.382843°N 4.330668°W | Category C(S) | 538 | ![]() | ||
Farraline House | 57°15′56″N 4°22′52″W / 57.265538°N 4.381198°W | Category B | 539 | ![]() |
Key
The scheme for classifying buildings in Scotland is:
- Category A: "buildings of national or international importance, either architectural or historic, or fine little-altered examples of some particular period, style or building type."[3]
- Category B: "buildings of regional or more than local importance, or major examples of some particular period, style or building type which may have been altered."[3]
- Category C(S): "buildings of local importance, lesser examples of any period, style, or building type, as originally constructed or moderately altered; and simple traditional buildings which group well with others in categories A and B."[3]
There are approximately 47,400 listed buildings in Scotland. Of these, around 8 per cent (some 3,800) are Category A, and 51 per cent (24,000) are Category B, with the rest listed at Category C(s).[4]
See also
References
- All entries, addresses and coordinates are based on data from Historic Scotland. This data falls under the Open Government Licence
- ↑ Sometimes known as OSGB36, the grid reference (where provided) is based on the British national grid reference system used by the Ordnance Survey.
• "Guide to National Grid". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
• "Get-a-map". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 2007-12-17. - ↑ The "HB Number" is a unique number assigned to each listed building by Historic Scotland.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 "What is Listing?". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
- ↑ Guide to the Protection of Scotland’s Listed Buildings. Historic Scotland. 2009. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-84917-013-0. Retrieved 2010-07-06.