Subsection (7) is a technical amplification of when a building, such as a stately home, is considered open to the public.
We should not accept the idea that in order to exploit tourism one requires the presence of a castle or stately home.
Is there no "stately home" that might be acquired in the meantime?
But after that they visit a stately home.
You desecrate a national treasure, no less than by turning a stately home into an auto parts warehouse.
The other was to a comprehensive school which had taken over a stately home—a rather unlikely start you might have thought.
Then the chap says that it is a stately home and it must not fall apart.
I think it could also be described as an historic home, and possibly even as a stately home.