Glasgow’s Clyde
We started at the old (1870s) Hydraulic Pumping Station on Yorkhill Quay which used to power a swing bridge over the dock entrance. These Victorians really knew how to dress up their industrial buildings! It’s been used as a restaurant recently, hence the much newer conservatory. From here, you can look back to the Riverside Museum and the Tallship Glenlee.
Across the river, on the south side, is the Science Centre flanked by the BBC building, just visible on the left, and the Glasgow Tower which opened in 2001.
Glasgow Tower is the only structure on earth capable of rotating 360 degrees into the prevailing wind and holds the Guinness-World-Record for the tallest fully rotating freestanding structure in the World. At 127 metres high, the equivalent of over 30 double-decker buses, the Glasgow Tower is the tallest freestanding building in Scotland.
You should be able to take a lift up to the Tower’s viewing platform. However, it has been closed for about 80% of its life because of a succession of structural problems and the fact that it can’t operate if it’s too windy. To be honest, I’m not that keen to try it…..
Near here, two pedestrian bridges cross the Clyde. We took the Millenium Bridge across the river, pausing in the centre to look upstream to Bell’s Bridge (the blue one) and the Clyde Arc, better known in Glasgow as the Squinty Bridge.
We only walked a little way along the south bank so that we could cross back over at Bell’s Bridge. We got a good view of the Clyde Auditorium (aka Armadillo) on the north bank and saw a poignant memorial to a firefighter.
The BBC Scotland Building is fronted by a sculpture, Poised Array, by Toby Paterson and displays a fabulous reflection of the other side of the river in its glass walls.
In 1988, Bell’s Bridge would never have been quiet enough to get a shot like this! Once again, we stopped in the centre of the bridge, this time to watch jet-skiers tearing downriver.
Back on the north side of the river we came to the Finnieston Crane – you’ve possibly spotted it already in both 1988 and 2016 pictures. It was erected in 1931 to load huge locomotives, a major export and Glasgow’s second most important engineering industry.
A little further on, we reached the North Rotunda. It and its southern companion mark the ends of the Harbour Tunnel built in the 1890s and long since fallen into disuse. The North Rotunda has been a restaurant for as long as I can remember, but the South Rotunda is boarded up. However, during the Garden Festival it served as Nardini’s Ice Cream Parlour.
Across from the Rotunda is a Hilton Garden Inn with a riverside bar. It was a very hot day, so we couldn’t pass that could we? Behind me, you can see the South Rotunda and the STV building. It seems that drinking beer in the sun was a 1988 pastime too!
Just past the Hilton is the Squinty Bridge. We didn’t cross it, but I’ve included this shot so that you can see why it got it’s nickname. I’ve never heard anyone actually calling it the Clyde Arc.
From the Kingston Bridge we decided to head for home. First we had to negotiate the bridges and walkways across the M8 and the Clydeside Expressway, both very busy roads.
On the other side, we came across this lovely old building, a former savings bank.
We walked past the splendid new Central Gurdwara and the building it replaced…
….before heading home through the greenery of Kelvingrove Park.
What a beautiful walk! When I come to Glasgow, I want to do it 🙂
Well, I’ve never been one for pictures. I have very few pictures of anything… until I got my first digital camera… not to mention my first smartphone. Now it’s just so easy. And there are so many occasions to share pics. Once, I just didn’t really feel I needed all those pics.
And, may I say? You look better now 😉
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Oh, that’s very kind of you! But I always like the look of my brown hair. I’ve been gray so long I always forget how dark it was.
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I was in Glasgow in 2010 but not for long enough.
Isn’t it always time for a beer?
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Jackie, you are so right!
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Love the contrast of new and old architecture. I don’t think I would have the guts to brave Glasgow Tower either. Enjoyed seeing ‘Anabel Then And Now’ as well 🙂 . Fantastic mural by Smug.
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Thanks – nice to hear from you again. I assume you have reached somewhere with wifi!
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🤗 WiFi and a bit of downtime after a lot of sailing/touring 🇲🇨
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I remember the garden festival well and the sightseeing tower it had which they sold afterwards to Rhyl in North Wales where it worked perfectly for years. Meanwhile we got a brand new one which was not so reliable. How could we not have the foresight and initiative to hang on to the old one? I often do that walk and it has many interesting features. Managed to walk under the old rotundas a few times before they closed and still cycle under the new Clyde Tunnel when I’m feeling brave, although it’s much safer than it was.
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I didn’t know that was what happened to the tower! I assumed it had just been demolished.
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Very interesting and that’s a great pic!
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Thank you!
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oh what a wonderful walk beside the river and back in history.
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Thank you, glad you liked it!
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Bridges and archetecture is so fascinating. Practical objects of art all around us
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Very true!
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Love “walking” with you and seeing all the bridges and sights. I would never go up that antenna-it looks like it will fall over any minute! Too bad that nothing is being done with the south tower but hopefully, in the future, someone will have bright ideas. The squinty bridge looks like a bridge i would be scared crossing over since I am scared of heights
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Thanks Birgit! The bridge isn’t that high, but I agree about the tower.
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I think you’re not the only one who is going to have”hair envy” with a younger self! And some of us have more reason than you have! 😉
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I do still have quite a lot! Compared to some people, no names, no pack drill but I’m married to him 😉
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I think there’s a few more of us who can give him a run for his money☹️
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