Headingley Castle is the largest of several
Tudor Gothic houses designed by John Child, with an exterior of
ashlar and a slate roof. Child employed modern building techniques and materials inside including
cast iron in its construction with the emphasis on making it fireproof. It features a central three-storey tower and has
battlements. The entry porch has a
Tudor arch, with an
oriel window above, and leads to an octagonal entrance hall. Octagonal buttresses become octagonal turrets at the top, and there is a larger octagonal
turret at the rear. The lodge is of
gritstone with a
slate roof. Above the door is the motto 'ACE QUOD ACIS' (
do what you do -i.e. well). ==See also==