In 1672, when the last of the Lumsden line died, the castle went to Thomas Burnett of Sauchen.
The castle became ruinous by 1722,[2] but has been restored for David Lumsden, who acquired it from the Cluny estate in 1973, by the architect Ian Begg[1] in 1980-84.
[3] The four-storey[2] castle is small, with thick walls which are constructed in the lower courses of large boulders.
There is a semicircular stair tower in the re-entrant angle,[1] with an ashlar cap house.
[3] Internally, the basement has three vaulted rooms, including the kitchen, which has a wide arched fireplace.