The Shore Chapel

A gradual and careful restoration

Built in 1723 as a Presbyterian kirk for the village of Scoulag, the Shore Chapel was designed by Alexander McGill, architect of the original Mount Stuart. The chapel has recently undergone a gradual restoration as the burial place for the Third Marquess and his wife. This has involved rot repairs, renewal of slates, decorative leadwork and rainwater goods. Walls have been rendered and re-coated with limewash with reinstated circular windows over entrance doors harking back to the building’s late 19th-century conversion to an Italianate Chapel and mortuary. Original lancet windows and doors have been repaired, carefully retaining their historic graffiti carved into glass panes and timber boarding.

Conservation

Protective work has been completed to prevent further erosion of the shore edge and new drainage protects against flooding from the land. A whitewashed wall has been built around the cemetery, including new gates adorned with castings from the family shield and decorated with inset woodland motifs that acknowledge their delightful setting.

A further phase of work to the interior will reinstate the plasterwork and timber dado and floor.  Sustainable background heating will be provided by air source heat pumps, while the crypt will have new bronze gates based on an unrealised design from 1900 by Robert Weir Schulz, then heavily involved in the design of interiors for the rebuilt Mount Stuart.

Project Info

Overview
Client
Marquess of Bute
Location
Isle of Bute
Consultants
Project Manager
Gleeds (Phases 1 and 2)
Structural Engineer
Ramage Young Structural Engineers
Cost Consultant
Brown and Wallace
Contractor
George Hanson Building Contractors Ltd