A Glasgow Style former Mews cottage for 26 Huntly Gardens in the West End of Glasgow. Built around 1900 for John Wylie of the cabinetmakers Wylie and Lochhead.
Former 6th Battalion Highland Light Infantry drill hall on Yorkhill Street in the West End of Glasgow. Designed by William Hunter McNab, it was built in 1901.
The former municipal buildings for the City of Glasgow and the County of Lanarkshire on Wilson Street in Glasgow. Designed by Clarke and Bell in a neo-Greek style, it was built in 1842. The Glasgow City Council moved out of this building in 1889 when the new City Chambers were opened in George Square.
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.
Waterloo Chambers in central Glasgow. Designed by J.J. Burnet in a Free Classical Style, it was built in 1899 as a commercial building for the Trustees of James Kirkland.
The Late Gothic style former YMCA building on the corner of Maxwell Road and Pollokshaws Road in Glasgow. Designed by Robert Miller, it was built in the mid-1890s.
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 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.
Somersby on Dalziel Drive on the Southside of Glasgow. Designed by H.E Clifford in a Scots Baronial type style, it was build in 1902 for William T. Geddes, the Glasgow oil and produce broker.
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.
75 Buchanan Street, Glasgow. Constructed in 1880 in a Free Classical style, it was designed by James Thomson. The attic was added in 1887 by Baird and Thomson. It was built for the glass merchants John and Daniel MacDougall.