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  2. The 13th Note Café - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_13th_Note_Café

    The 13th Note Café was a restaurant, bar and music venue in Glasgow, Scotland. From its beginnings on Glassford Street (what is now Bar Bacchus), the 13th Note moved to its present site on King Street in 1997. [1] A few years later, the 13th Note franchise expanded to include a larger club venue on Clyde Street.

  3. The Crosslands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crosslands

    In 2015, the historically working-class pub [4] was given a £40,000 refurbishment by new owners Kained Holdings in an attempt to attract more middle-class customers. [5] In 2016, it was known as The Kelbourne Saint [ 6 ] and by 2022 it was called BrewHaus.

  4. Curlers Rest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curlers_Rest

    At the front of the building there are three doors. In the past there were three bars here, the door on the left leading through the lounge bar, the door on the right to the small snug, and the door in the middle leading upstairs to the hall space/banqueting area above. From 1999 till June 2010 the pub was a Scream pub geared firmly towards ...

  5. Templeton On The Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Templeton_On_The_Green

    Templeton On The Green, converted from the Templeton Carpet Factory, is a distinctive building near the People's Palace, in Glasgow, Scotland, opened in 1892. [1] In 1984 it was converted into the Templeton Business Centre, then in 2005 a major regeneration project made it into a mixed use 'lifestyle village' incorporating apartments, office space, and the WEST brewery, bar and restaurant.

  6. The Horse Shoe Bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Horse_Shoe_Bar

    The Horse Shoe Bar (or Horseshoe Bar) is a public house on Drury Street, Glasgow, Scotland. A bar opened on the site as far back as 1846 when William Turnbull, a local spirits dealer moved in to the premises. [1] The licence changed several times in subsequent years before being taken over by John Scoullar in 1884. [2]

  7. Ashton Lane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashton_Lane

    The entrance was moved from Byres Rd to Ashton Lane, and the old entrance became Bonham's Wine Bar (the railing in the original foyer is retained in the upstairs bar). After falling into disrepair, the cinema closed 30 June 2002, but was relaunched in October 2003 after a multimillion-pound refurbishment.

  8. Cottiers, Glasgow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottiers,_Glasgow

    Cottiers is a theatre located in Glasgow, Scotland. It also operates as a bar and restaurant. It also operates as a bar and restaurant. Cottiers occupies the building of the 19th-century former Dowanhill Parish Church .

  9. King Tut's Wah Wah Hut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Tut's_Wah_Wah_Hut

    King Tut's was founded, in the former Saints and Sinners pub in St Vincent Street in the centre of Glasgow, by the DF Concerts boss Stuart Clumpas, who wanted to create a platform for promoting bands at club level, showcasing them with gigs seven days a week at a reasonable hour, after being unable to find such an establishment in the city centre's nightlife.