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Kincorth Library; Aberdeen Central Library; Airyhall Library; Bridge of Don Library; Bucksburn Library; Cornhill Library; Cove Library (Aberdeen, Scotland) Culter Library; Cults Library and Learning Centre; Dyce Library; Ferryhill Library; Kaimhill Library; Mastrick Library; Northfield Library; Tillydrone Library; Torry Library; Woodside ...
Cambuslang / ˈ k æ m b ə s ˈ l æ ŋ / ⓘ (Scots: Cammuslang, from Scottish Gaelic: Camas Lang) [3] is a town on the south-eastern outskirts of Greater Glasgow, Scotland.With approximately 30,000 residents, it is the 27th largest town in Scotland by population, [4] although, never having had a town hall, it may also be considered the largest village in Scotland.
Various concerns were raised by local residents, community councillors (representing Halfway/Cambuslang East ward), the Lowland Reserve Forces and Cadets Association who have a rifle range adjacent to the site, [30] and Clare Haughey and James Kelly, MSPs for the area, which were presented to the committee along with a 1300-signature petition ...
Cambuslang Public Library – a county council erection by John Stewart in 1936–38 – 'one long range with stripped classical detail'. Now closed and demolished (April 2007). Health Institute (1926, by John Stewart, Lanarkshire County Council architect). It is similar in style to his other buildings if a little more domestic.
Cambuslang is an area of South Lanarkshire, close to Glasgow which has a long religious, economic and industrial history. Subcategories. This category has the ...
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The opening of the M74 Motorway extension between Cambuslang and Tradeston in Glasgow in 2011 introduced a quick route to and from the Newton area. Motorway connections heading south towards Hamilton and England, or towards northern (M73/M80) or eastern Scotland ( M8 ) have been in place for some years.
The majority of the housing is a local authority 'scheme' constructed in the late 1960s and early 1970s [1] to alleviate housing shortages in the area; [2] [3] in particular, the tight network of poorly-appointed tenements on the north side of Cambuslang's main street was demolished wholesale and its residents decanted to new tower blocks and to the periphery of the town, [4] echoing the ...