Newark Castle, Port Glasgow

Newark Castle stands close to the last shipyard on the Lower Clyde
The bypass road gives views over parkland formerly crowded with shipyards
Original gatehouse, tower house and corner tower
The barrel vaulted gatehouse entrance leads by a path to the main entrance
The mansion's main entrance is in its east wing
The north range seen from the shore to its north east. See also 1, 2, 3
The west wing

Newark Castle is a well-preserved castle sited on the south shore of the estuary of the River Clyde in Port Glasgow, Inverclyde, Scotland, where the firth gradually narrows from the Firth of Clyde and navigation upriver is made difficult by shifting sandbanks. For centuries this location was used to offload seagoing ships, and led to the growth of Port Glasgow close to the castle on either side and to the south. When dredging techniques made the Clyde navigable as far as Glasgow the port became a shipbuilding centre, and the castle was surrounded by shipyards. Ferguson Shipbuilders, the last shipyard on the lower Clyde, stands close to the west of the castle, but the shipyards to the east were removed around the 1980s and new landscaped areas formed to the east of Newark Castle, opening up scenic views of the castle and across the Clyde from a new bypass road.