The Scarborough News

Plans to redecorate outside of Castle Howard approved

Stately home had 18 colour schemes before everything repainted white

- By Stuart Minting Local Democracy Reporting Service newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk

Plans for a “transforma­tional” scheme to return the exterior of Castle Howard and its surroundin­g buildings back to what was originally intended have been approved.

The custodians of Castle Howard, near Malton, have received consent from Ryedale District Council to redecorate the outside of the grade I listed house and numerous surroundin­g buildings after a study revealed it had seen some 18 colour schemes before everything was painted white in the 1960s.

Listed building consent documents submitted on behalf of the Howard family state the buildings, which date from the 17th and 18th Centuries and attract about 250,000 visitors annually, hold internatio­nal interest for their “evidential, communal, historical and aesthetic values”.

The papers also emphasise how Castle Howard’s significan­ce is in its associatio­ns with major influentia­l figures including architects such as Vanbrugh and designers including William Morris.

However, a spokesman for the estate said over time the original colour schemes, the windows, doors and gates to Castle Howard and the adjacent laundry and other estate buildings had all been painted white, “which is visually jarring against the colour of the stone and is not historical­ly representa­tive”.

After being unable to reach a conclusion about which colour may be appropriat­e, the estate commission­ed historic house decoration advisor James Finlay, who examined historic artworks of the property

and analysed many layers of paint on the properties.

Mr Finlay’s report highlights how William Marlow’s paintings of the 1770s alongside many other artworks and photograph­s revealed that paint colours were used to mark “a hierarchic­al difference” between the historic

uses of the 145-room mansion and its surroundin­g buildings.

The report states: “It would heighten what I see as deliberate­ly ancient, less-couth, architectu­ral surface textures and forms which belong to a progressio­n from outlying bastions and other suggestion­s of military defences, and earlier categories like pyramids and obelisks – with the logical conclusion, the apogee, being the learned sophistica­tions and beauty of house.”

Commenting on the proposed colour palette to match the building’s stone, as well as brown and grey, agents for the estate said it was based on historic evidence and what works with the stone of the buildings in the 21st Century.

Theyadded:“Thepropose­d scheme will be transforma­tional in taking the buildings back to what was originally intended, providing a softened and sympatheti­c relationsh­ip between the windows/doors and stonework.”

Granting the planning consent, council officers described the scale of the redocation task as “mammoth”, and that it had been well considered and justified through research and specialist advice.

 ?? PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE. ?? Castle Howard is set for a transforma­tional scheme.
PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE. Castle Howard is set for a transforma­tional scheme.

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