The ruined site is now a scheduled monument, and its grounds are listed in the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland.
[4] He commissioned extensive garden and restoration works around the estate incorporating the Abbey as a partial ruin within the house grounds.
[6] This also included the erection of the nearby Temple of the Muses and the Statue of William Wallace, Bemersyde.
[5][7][8][9] This circular nine columned gazebo stands since 1817 on Bass Hill, a mound overlooking the River Tweed at the west end of the village.
The temple originally contained a stone statue of the Apollo Belvedere on a circular pedestal showing nine Muses with laurel wreaths.