Posted another image on #PixelFed, this opne of McPherson Park Junior Secondary, in its then-mothballed state. Shortly after it was merged into the Bunaby South complex.
I tested my new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (I used the cheapest color film available) 📸
This is an elegantly simple little building at 14 Bath Street in Glasgow. Unusually, it seems to have retained its original ground floor windows and has some great detailing around the second floor ones. I haven't been able to find out who designed it or when it was built, so if any one knows, please let me know.
Designed by John Honeyman in a Venetian Renaissance style and built in 1872, this is one of the most striking buildings in central Glasgow.
It's also great to see a historic building not being overwhelmed by modern shop signage, so well done to Tescos, Sally Beauty and Savers Health and Beauty
The magnificent former Parish Council Offices on George Street in Glasgow. Designed by Thomson and Sandilands in an Edwardian Baroque style they were constructed in 1900. This building was hidden for a while as it was being refurbished, but it's now looking great.
White's Clay Pipe Factory on Bain Street in Glasgow. Designed by M. Forsyth and built in 1877, this is one of the most distinctive 19th Century industrial buildings left standing in the east end of the city.
The former Saint Jude's Church on West George Street in Glasgow. Designed by John Stephen in a Greek Revival style, it was built in 1838. This is a stunning building with a remarkably timeless look to it.
I've always been rather intrigued by these buildings in the Whiteinch area of Glasgow which seem to have been made from World War Two Nissen huts. I've no idea if they're really that old, though.
Partick Cross Mansions on the corner of Byres Road and Dumbarton Road. This is a classic example of a grand domed tenement at an important Glasgow crossroads, an architectural feature which can be found throughout the city.
The crown spire of the Kelvin Stevenson Memorial Church in Glasgow standing above the main arch of the Belmont Street Bridge as seen today from the Kelvin Walkway.
The Buchanan Street section of former Glasgow Herald Building. Built in 1879, it was designed by James Sellars. It connects on to the Mitchell Street section, which was built just over a decade later in 1893 and was designed by John Keppie and Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
Red sandstone tenement building on Park Road in the Woodlands area of Glasgow. This might not be the grandest of tenement buildings, but there's still something about the simplicity of its lines and curves which draws your eyes towards it.