The office building of the former Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company in the Govan area of Glasgow. Built in 1899, it was designed by Honeyman and Keppie.
Park Terrace townhouses overlooking Kelvingrove Park in the West End of Glasgow. Designed by Charles Wilson in a French Renaissance style, they were built in 1855.
A wonderfully shaped roof vent on Cathcart Trinity Church on Clarkston Road in Glasgow. Designed by W.G. Rowan in a Gothic style, it was built in 1893.
The former James Buchanan and Company warehouse on Washington Street in Glasgow. Designed by A. Gardner in 1897, with additions by H.E. Clifford in 1907, at the time it was built it was the largest bonded whisky warehouse in the world. It's now used as a business centre.
I love stumbling across unusual little architectural features, like this apparently circular room nestled between two late Victorian buildings at the junction of Clarkston and Merrylee Roads in the Cathcart area of Glasgow. Constructed in 1892, these buildings were designed by Charles Davidson and used to house Cathcart Police Station.
Shinobazu pond in Ueno park, Tokyo. The impressive tower in the background is the ill-fated Sofitel hotel, built in 1994, and demolished in 2006. Its architect, Kikutake Kiyonori, was one of the founders of the Metabolist school in the 1960's.
I took the photo with a Canon AE-1 and an 80mm lens. The print was made on Ilford paper, probably multigrade RC.
The former Merchants' House in Hutcheson Street in Glasgow. Built in a Classical style in the 1840s, it was used for its original purpose until the 1870s, when the Merchants' House moved to its current location on the northwest corner of George Square.
A pic I took of the Jacksonville, FL skyline on an old digital camera back in December 2011. I revisited this photo several years later and tried to go with a “cinematic” look.
The distinctive towerheads of Glasgow's Kelvin Hall, topped with bronze filigreed orbs. The Kelvin Hall was designed as an exhibition hall by Thomas P.M. Somers and was built in 1926.
The Couper Institute on Clarkston Road in the Cathcart area of Glasgow. The right-hand part of the building was designed by James Sellars in a Scots Renaissance style and was built in 1887, while the flat-roofed hall on the left was designed by J.A.T. Houston in the 1920s. The institute is named after Robert Couper, a local paper mill owner who left money for the construction of a library, reading room and hall.
The former Gordon Brothers warehouse on the corner of Glassford Street and Wilson Street in Glasgow. Built in 1908, it was designed in the Glasgow Style by Robertson and Dobbie.
The former Langside Hill Church on the Southside of Glasgow. One of my favourite churches in the city, it was designed by Alexander Skirving. Dating from 1894, it was the last Classical style church constructed in Glasgow.
Clock tower on the Streamline Moderne/Art Deco amenity block in Cathcart, Glasgow. Built for Weir Pumps Ltd in 1937, it was designed by Wylie, Shanks and Wylie.
The wonderfully grand and imposing James Watt North Building of Glasgow University. Designed by J.J. Burnet, it's a mix of Renaissance and Scots Baronial styles and was built in the early 1900s.