The Scott House, completed in 1911 and more than 18,000 square feet, was designed by Richmond architecture firm Noland and Baskerville. One of the grandest residences of its day, it was built for Frederi William Scott and Elizabeth Strother Scott in a Beaux-Arts style. The design references Newport’s Marble House, which in turn looks to the Petit Trianon at Versailles. The exterior is Tenessee limestone and terra cotta on the first and second floors, with a copper-clad, recessed third floor, as well as a copper-clad conservatory on the first floor. A rear service wind is made of buff brick. According to the National Register, its interior “can be understood as an architectural museum, with rooms in many different styles.”