Fog House

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A Fog House at Invercauld near Braemar

Fog Houses are a special type of pleasure or summer house popular in Scotland and at one time commonly found on many country estates as a feature in the pleasure gardens.[1][2] The name 'Fog' derives from the Scots word for the moss that was a major feature of the building, mainly used to line the walls and roof.[3]

One definition states that Fog Houses were Pleasure Houses, small shelters lined with mossy turf.[3] They were often thatched with materials such as heather. Contents typically included a curved bench placed against the walls with other features such as the example at Bonnington Isle that had its table and bench neatly covered with moss,[4][1] and the one at Ballochmyle in Ayrshire that had the verses of a Robert Burns song hanging from the walls.[5]

Foundations of the Bonnington Isle Fog House.

Examples of Fog Houses

References

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