The distillery was turned into yuppy flats and the only building kept, renovated and I believe turned into an inn for the residents was Dundas House which has been erroneously logged as built as offices it wasn't!
Ann Dundas was *I think* the daughter of Revd Thomas Lawrence Dundas (3rd son of Thomas Dundas 1st Baron Dundas of Aske).
http://thepeerage.com/p4712.htmAs the family had hugely backed the building of the Forth and Clyde Canal they more or less owned Port Dundas. All the streets and roads leading to Port Dundas were named after the family Ann St/Port Dundas/Port Dundas Road etc.
I believe they had properties along the length of the canal. Certainly the canal cut through their Estate at Kerse near Falkirk, which obviously gave them the upper hand!

Very sad that our house was demolished, the last in Glasgow with no electricity at all ie gas lighting (including a water sealed chandelier in the dining room (no less!!) - now in the Peoples Palace, Glasgow Green along with pleasure boat tickets and other canal memorabilia donated by my gran). The house doesn't look big but it was huge, 7 rooms upstairs, 2 halls inner and outer, 18ft reception room/parlour, livingroom/kitchen plus scullery and laundry, indoor toilet and adjacent large bathroom and outside, 4 brick built outhouses. It was the harbour master house, next door and partly underneath, was the canal offices, partly above them the bridgekeepers flat and he also had a yard where he kept chickens!!