I love this Art Nouveau style version of the Glasgow Coat of Arms on one of the buildings of the old Lambhill Street School in the Kinning Park area of the city.
I love this Art Nouveau style version of the Glasgow Coat of Arms on one of the buildings of the old Lambhill Street School in the Kinning Park area of the city.
Love the font and the craquelure on this sign painted by one of the doors on the former Our Lady and St Margaret's Primary School in Kinning Park in Glasgow
Cart entrance to the former Kinning Park Colour Works on Milnpark Road in Glasgow, featuring the original 1890s doors and a fantastic polychromatic brickwork archway.
#glasgow #kinningpark #polychromaticbrickwork
#brickwork #industrialheritage #architecture #doorway #architecturephotography
The Kinning Park Pumping Station on Milnpark Street in Glasgow. Designed by D. and A. Horne, it was built in the early 1900s. I love the way the roof line mirrors the curves of the windows.
#glasgow #kinningpark #industrialheritage #architecture #glasgowbuildings
#glasgowarchictecture #architecturephotography
I've always loved this corner tenement on Paisley Road West in the Cessnock area of Glasgow.
Love the cupola on this corner tenement on Paisley Road West on the Southside of Glasgow.
I love this Art Nouveau style version of the Glasgow Coat of Arms on one of the buildings of the old Lambhill Street School in the Kinning Park area of the city.
Polychromatic brickwork on a former industrial building on Portman Street in the Kinning Park area of Glasgow.
Is this the best gushet building in Glasgow? A gushet building is one constructed on a narrow strip of land at a junction between two roads (in this case Paisley Road West and Govan Road). Designed in a Renaissance style by Bruce and Hay, it was built in the 1880s as the Ogg Brothers Drapery Warehouse and Department Store.
One of the best things about living in Glasgow is turning a corner and finding yourself looking up at a roof like this!
The former Ogg Brothers Department Store at Paisley Road Toll was designed by Bruce and Hay, and was built in the 1880s. It's topped by the Spirit of Commerce and Industry, who is perhaps better known as the Kinning Park Angel, the Angel of the South, or simply Mrs. Ogg.