Tuesday, 4 April 2023

The Times catches up with Not Just Sheep & Rugby!

by EWAN LAMB

One of the country's leading conservation groups has expressed dismay at Scottish Borders Council's proposed demolition of Lowood House, the country mansion near Melrose which stands on the middle of a site earmarked for up to 400 new houses.

Meanwhile today's Scottish edition of The Times newspaper reports on the 'outcry' surrounding the controversial idea of bulldozing the Nineteenth Century property some 14 days after we broke the story.

The Architectural Heritage Society of Scotland (AHSS) has written to all 34 members of the Borders local authority urging them to abandon the demolition option in favour of retaining the house which has a value of £1 million, according to a recent report by council officers.

AHSS says it is responding to a news item on the BBC website ‘Lowood House near Melrose set for demolition’. 

"This was brought to our attention by a member who lives in Melrose. We are writing in relation to ‘Tweedbank Expansion – A Community for the Future’ [a document presented to councillors at their March meeting].

The Society's James Seabridge-Cooper, Convener of the Forth & Borders Cases Panel, points out: "The entry for Lowood House on page 508 of ‘The Buildings of Scotland : Borders’, by Kitty Cruft, John Dunbar and Richard Fawcett, 2006, is as follows: ‘A beautifully situated house on the S bank of the River Tweed, developed from a small early C19 villa purchased c. 1829 for his country seat by Robert Reid, Master of Works and Architect to the King. 

"The original villa, two storeys, three bays, with a slightly advanced centre bay, faced S. Reid seems to have added a simple two-storey kitchen office range to the W, and a Regency-style veranda across the ground floor which incorporated a projecting porch. The villa mostly disappeared when the house was extended by Henry Kidd in the late C19, when the W end was remodelled and added to. 

"An L-shaped addition was built across the S front, and a billiard room with a bedroom above, at the E end. Mutule blocks were added to the roof line. The interior was completely recast in the late C19 mostly in a classical style.’ "

The letter urges councillors to continue the item regarding the proposal to demolish Lowood House, a non-designated historic environment asset and postpone making any decision on the future of the mansion pending the preparation of a conservation plan and exploration of other options, for example, retaining the house for letting to groups. 

According to Mr Seabridge-Cooper: "Lowood House is presently a local asset, presumably worth at least £1m even without its wider estate, and to spend £450,000 destroying a £1m asset seems a significant waste of taxpayer's resources. This is exactly the kind of place large groups of tourists seek to rent by the week, so if the report does not mention using it as single occupancy accommodation, it is a serious omission from the research."

The council is reminded that Lowood House contains embodied carbon and Policy 7 of the recently approved National Planning Framework 4 ( NPF4) has the ‘Policy Intent: To protect and enhance historic environment assets and places, to enable positive change as a catalyst for the regeneration of places.’ 

The second policy outcome is ‘Redundant or neglected historic buildings are brought back into sustainable and productive uses. We ask you to recognise that Lowood House contains embodied carbon, and your carbon calculations should include those expended in demolition, which are not recognised in the ‘Tweedbank Expansion – A Community for the Future’ report.

The letter concludes: "We urge you to support the principles of sustainability and to make every effort to retain, repair and adapt Lowood House, modifying as necessary the layout of Tweedbank expansion". to permit its re-use.

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