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Glasgow Queen Street (Scottish Gaelic: Sràid na Banrighinn) is a passenger railway terminus serving the city centre of Glasgow, Scotland.It is the smaller of the city's two mainline railway terminals (the larger being Glasgow Central) and is the third-busiest station in Scotland behind Central and Edinburgh Waverley (as of March 2023).
The other main station in Glasgow is Glasgow Queen Street, which primarily serves regional and intercity services to the north of Glasgow. With just under 21 million passengers in 2022–2023, Glasgow Central is the seventeenth-busiest railway station in Britain and the busiest in Scotland. [ 5 ]
Queen Street is one of the major thoroughfares in the city of Glasgow, Scotland. The street runs north from Argyle Street (parallel to nearby Buchanan Street) until it reaches George Square at the junction with St. Vincent Street. Several local landmarks are located on this street including Royal Exchange Square, with the Gallery of Modern Art ...
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Springburn railway station serves the Springburn district of Glasgow, Scotland.The station is 1 + 1 ⁄ 4 miles (2.0 km) north of Glasgow Queen Street (High level) station on the Cumbernauld Line and is a terminus of the Springburn branch, a spur from Bellgrove station, on the North Clyde Line.
The Royal Exchange Square is a public square in Glasgow, Scotland. The square lies between Buchanan Street and Queen Street, opening out Queen Street and Ingram Street to the south of George Square. It is also easily accessible from Buchanan Street on the west side of the square, through two prominent archways at Royal Bank Place. The square is ...
I do not have a current picture of the Gordon Street entrance however in the book Glasgow Central - Central to Glasgow [1] there are multiple references to Glasgow Central and Central Station. There two pictures naming the station as Central Station (page 35 of the Hielanman's Umbrella; and page 115 of the south end of the 1904 extension from ...
Archoas was located in the Grade A listed building on 21-41 Queen Street, Glasgow and covered 3,240 square metres. [1] [2] The three-level club centred around a dance-floor with balconies around it. [3] [4] Within the club was the Skye bar, which was described by The Caterer as "as club within a club". [5]