Historic houses The trust owns 27 historic houses, ranging from large houses such as
Culzean Castle and the
House of Dun to humbler dwellings such as the
Tenement House and
Moirlanich Longhouse.
Coastline and countryside . The trust is the third largest land manager in Scotland, owning of Scottish countryside including 46
Munros, eight
national nature reserves, more than 400 islands and islets, and significant stretches of coastline. Trust countryside properties include
Glen Coe,
Torridon and
Mar Lodge Estate. The trust's management of its coastal and countryside sites is guided by its
Wild Land Policy which aims to preserve the land in its undeveloped state and provide access and enjoyment to the public. Trust sites are home to a diverse variety of native wildlife. The Trust estimate that almost 25% of Scotland's seabirds nest on its island and coastal sites, equivalent to 8% of seabirds in Europe. The Trust's countryside properties are home to native mammal species including
red deer,
pine marten,
wildcat and
red squirrel. Since 1957, the trust have owned and managed the archipelago of
St Kilda, Scotland's first
World Heritage Site and the only World Heritage Site in the UK to be listed for both its natural and cultural significance. St Kilda and the surrounding
sea stacks are home to over one million seabirds
Paintings and sculpture collection Across its properties the trust is responsible for the conservation and display of hundreds of thousands of objects from paintings to
furniture and domestic tools. The primary aim of the trust's curatorship is to present collections and works of art in the historic settings for which they were commissioned or acquired.
Most visited sites During the 2023-2024 financial year the trust received in 4.5 million visitors in total, including an estimated 1.8 million visitors recorded at free-to-enter countryside properties: the trust considers this figure to be below the actual number due to practical challenges of recording open access across a large countryside estate.
Gallery Crookston Castle.jpg|
Crookston Castle in
Glasgow was the first property acquired by the Trust. Ridges_of_Gearr_Aenoch_and_Aonach_Dubh,_Glencoe.jpg|
Glen Coe, the Trust's first major land acquisition BurnsCottage.jpg|
Robert Burns Birthplace Museum, the Trust's most popular visitor site Culzean_Castle_house_and_gardens_01.JPG|
Culzean Castle in
South Ayrshire is one of the Trust's most iconic sites. ==See also==