Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of tallest buildings in Glasgow which are at least 40m (131ft) in height in the largest city in Scotland. The current tallest structure, at 127 metres (417 ft), is the Glasgow Tower within the Glasgow Science Centre .
The Glasgow Tower is the tallest building in Glasgow and Scotland, and has held these records since its completion in 2001. [2] It was designed by architect Richard Horden in 1992 and was initially proposed as a landmark for the city, with a proposal to build the tower in city's St Enoch Square .
List of tallest buildings and structures in Edinburgh; List of tallest buildings and structures in Glasgow; UK-wide lists: List of tallest buildings in the United Kingdom; List of tallest structures in the United Kingdom; List of tallest buildings and structures in the United Kingdom by usage; List of tallest buildings by United Kingdom settlement
Anniesland Court is a 22-storey residential tower block in the Anniesland area of Glasgow, Scotland, designed by J Holmes & Partners and completed in 1968. It is the tallest listed building in Scotland, and is remarkably similar to Ernő Goldfinger's later and more famous Trellick Tower in London.
The Ard (Scottish Gaelic: An Àrd, meaning "high"), is an approved 36-storey skyscraper in the Blythswood Hill area of Glasgow, Scotland. [1] The development was formally submitted to Glasgow City Council in 2021 by Watkin Jones Group, with the original proposals seeking to construct a 33-storey "co-living" development in Glasgow City Centre.
Tall buildings in Glasgow, Scotland. Pages in category "Skyscrapers in Glasgow" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total.
Central Quay (Scottish Gaelic: Cidhe Mheadhain) is a mixed use development at 89 Hydepark Street, Glasgow, Scotland. Consisting of four buildings, the tallest structure, Block H2, is one of the tallest buildings in Glasgow, standing at 58m tall and consisting of 20 storeys. [1]
It is one of a cluster of high-rise buildings to be constructed in the centre of Glasgow during the early 1960s; the others being St Andrew's House (1964), Fleming House (1961), the Royal Stuart Hotel (1963) – and the nearby Glasgow College of Building and Printing (1964), with which it shares many design and engineering similarities.