Camphill Gate on Pollokshaws Road in Glasgow. Built in 1906, it was designed by John Nisbet. Unusually for a Glasgow tenement it has five storeys rather than four, and a roof terrace offering magnificent views across the city, and out into the countryside beyond.
The Scots Baronial brilliance of Frank Stirrat's 1879 Dixon Halls on Cathcart Road in the Govanhill area of Glasgow. These public halls were a gift from William S. Dixon of the Govan Iron Works.
The beautiful and unique Battlefield Rest Tram Shelter on the Southside of Glasgow. Designed by Frank Burnet and Boston, it was opened in 1915. The original plan was to have similar shelters across the city's extensive tram network, but this was the only one which was ever built.
The former Hamilton and Manson Grain Mill on the corner of West Street and Wallace Street in the Tradeston area of Glasgow. Designed by W.F. McGibbon in a Flemish style, it was built in the 1890s
How can you fail to love a city which has decorations like this not on a castle, or a grand mansion or its town hall, but on a tenement building? This is part of W.M. Whyte's 1905 Scots Baronial tenement on Broomhill Drive in Glasgow.
I love this corner tower with a bell-cast roof topped by a copper dome on a villa on Southbrae Drive on the Jordanhill area of Glasgow. Known as Towerdene, it was built around 1900.
John Burnet Senior's 1870s French Gothic Church of Saint Jude's Congregation on Woodlands Road in Glasgow lit by the early morning Sun. It's spire is tall enough to be visible throughout much of the West End.
More photos taken around the Castle Museum of Saginaw County History, featuring the hallway, spiraling staircase, a model of a carousel, statue of Abraham Lincoln, an early 20th Century car, post office, and my favorite area: A reconstruction of the Myer Bros. Jewelry Store (1914-1974) which I believe is still the original cabinets, along with some photos of some wares. Shot in June 2023.
My favourite Glasgow tenement looking magnificent in the early morning sun. Situated on Broomhill Drive, it was designed by W.M. Whyte and was built in 1905.
Former clothing warehouse on Ingram Street in the Merchant City area of Glasgow. Built in 1899, it has now been converted into residential appartments.
The terminal pavilion of a terrace of Classical townhouses on Claremont Terrace in the West End of Glasgow. They were designed by John Baird and were built in 1847.
Love this terrace of Scots Renaissance style townhouses on Kirklee Road in the West End of Glasgow. Designed by John A Campbell, they were built in 1900.
A large Victorian villa with a touch of Scots Baronial detailing on Nithsdale Road in the Pollokshields area of Glasgow. Designed in the style of W.F. MacGibbon (who lived in the house next door), it was built in the 1880s.