, just to the south of the village Nowadays Luss is a
conservation village, with a bypass carrying the busy
A82 trunk road. In its position just off the main road to the West Highlands, it is visited by many tourists, and has a large car and coach park and a number of tourist-oriented shops. Its Outstanding Conservation Area contains 36 buildings, 24 of which are of Category B or C
listed status. and are identical constructions; namely
Avonlea and Ivy Bank,
Fernlea and Ivy Cottage,
Laurel Cottage and Ravenslea,
Rose Cottage and The Sheiling and
Yewbank and Lonaigview. Between 1980 and 2003, Luss was the main outdoor filming location for the
Scottish Television drama series
Take the High Road. Largely as a result of this, the village of 120 residents attracts more than 750,000 visitors each year. Although the programme is no longer made, the village's name in the series, "Glendarroch," is used for some buildings. The village has a kiltmaker and a bagpipe works. About a mile south of the village, in a cove at
Aldochlay, is a small figure on a stone plinth. A
contemporary legend evolved that it is a memorial to a child drowned in the loch, but it was in fact erected in 1890 by a local stonemason, who found the statue in a London scrapyard. 'Wee Peter', as he is locally known, was moved to the site after a brief spell near the railway, and has remained there ever since. ==Facilities==