Moy House, Moray

[2] The symmetrical frontage, described by Walker and Woodworth as "almost uncompromisingly severe",[2] has five bays, and a round-headed central door surmounted by a corniced doorpiece and flanked by narrow ionic columns.

[1][2] Also of three storeys and five bays, the west front has a recessed entrance, flanked by two Roman Doric columns, which in the past supported a porch roof.

[2] It remained in the Campbell's possession until 1733, when the seventeenth-century 'auld house' that had been built on the site was acquired by Major George Grant.

[2] In 1870, while the house was still owned by the Grant family,[3] Alexander Ross added the two-storey wings to the north and south.

[1] In 1988, concerns were reported in the local press about the condition of the building, which was at that date occupied in part by its owners, with some of the house rented to tenants.

Its owners indicated in 1997 that they hope to restore the house and convert it into flats, but building has remained abandoned and boarded up since the fire.