lockdown lens Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/tag/lockdown-lens/ South Glasgow Heritage and Environment Trust Fri, 17 Sep 2021 19:49:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/sghet.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/cropped-SGHET-300x300.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 lockdown lens Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/tag/lockdown-lens/ 32 32 193624195 Tenements https://sghet.com/tenements/ https://sghet.com/tenements/#comments Wed, 20 May 2020 19:53:21 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=7346 Glasgow Tenements   Right now, 20th May 2020, we are all experiencing more time at home. For many days have slowed down and life outside has almost in its entirety come to a standstill allowing us to become reflective of the spaces we inhabit. There is a new and acute awareness of our surroundings within […]

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Glasgow Tenements

 

glasgow tenements

Right now, 20th May 2020, we are all experiencing more time at home. For many days have slowed down and life outside has almost in its entirety come to a standstill allowing us to become reflective of the spaces we inhabit. There is a new and acute awareness of our surroundings within the walls of home. For us Glaswegians, this time will most likely be spent in one of the many tenements which dominate the city’s built environment.

 

Tenements have been part of Glasgow’s landscape since it developed from a fishermen’s town to a trade city, however, the traditional Scottish tenement did not originate in Glasgow, as we would like to believe, but in the fortified cities of Stirling and Edinburgh. As architect John Joseph Burns comments in his publication ‘Tenement, An Architectural History’, “the need for defensible wall cities such as Edinburgh and Stirling…led to small compact cities with little scope to expand beyond the walls and produced a vertical form of housing”.

 

Burns goes on to explain that the success of the tenement in Scotland was due to the damp climate, making elevated buildings off the ground more pragmatic, and Scotland’s abundant supply of stone allowed for structurally sound, tall buildings.

 

Tenements Eglinton Street
Queens Park Terrace (Eglinton Street) http://www.scotcities.com/thomson/tenements.htm

Tenement Style

 

During the rapid growth of Glasgow during the 17th, 18th and 19th Centuries, the tenement made room for the huge influx of people that were turning to the city to work. As Glasgow’s landscape changed so too did the traditional style of the Scottish Vernacular Tenement.

 

 

In his publication, Burns documents this gradual change through an informative timeline of key tenement styles from its origins on the High St, Gallowgate and Saltmarket to the east and west and of course here to the South as small suburbs were swallowed up by an ever-growing city boundary.

 

Scottish Vernacular Style

 

It is interesting to compare the Scottish Vernacular Style, typified by its turnpike staircases, small windows and subdivided rooms with the examples of tenements in the Southside which were typically built in from the 1850s – 1920s. Over the years improved living conditions, application of regulations, and the development of a middle class have pushed the tenement into a living arrangement which is still popular today.

 

Vernacular tenements
Vernacular Tenements on Glasgow High St 1868.

 

Aerial view of Lauriston in the 1960s http://www.scotcities.com/gorbals/laurieston.htm 

Glasgow Style

Walmer Crescent
Walmer Crescent, Ibrox in Edwardian times
Source: Scotcities

 

One of the most noticeable changes between the Scottish Vernacular and the later ‘Glasgow style’ is the availability of light. Early tenement construction of the 16th Century and 17th Century were typified by small windows, and one window was often the sole natural light source of a single flat or ‘single-end’. By the 20th Century, the Glasgow bay window found in tenements across areas such as Battlefield, Cathcart, Mount Florida and Pollokshields gave a generous source of light to its occupants.

 

 

It is arguable that this gradual architectural switch from small to large windows happened in Scotland as the price of glass cheapened and the population moved from working predominantly outdoors to indoors. As more of the population worked long hours in the many factories of industrial Glasgow, the need to be exposed to sunlight within the home became essential. Large windows to the front and back of the tenement helped the building to breathe, as well as its inhabitants, and helped to prevent mould and rot.

 

Architectural Tricks

Salisbury Quadrant/Crescent, designed by Alexander ‘Greek’ Thomson

 

Moreover, little architectural tricks such as ventilating windows in the larders and storage cupboards helped circulate air from the close into individual flats; no doubt, however causing draughts through windy Scottish winters! Light and air were key to the tenement and its inhabitants’ wellbeing.

 

Regulations in 1862 set by General Improvement and Police Scotland prevented ‘backland’ tenement building. ‘Backlands’ were tenements built behind those at street front and put pressure on communal facilities such as toilets, washhouses and ash pits as well as blocking natural light. Building regulations also meant that tenements height were restricted in relation to the width of the street and ensured appropriate space between more housing and the backcourt.

 

Supply of clean water and communal inside toilets followed, and even though by today’s standards these early regulations leave much to be desired, it did mean that the tenement became an attractive form of housing to Glasgow’s growing middle class. A wealthier marketplace resulted in more elaborate examples, with decorative features both externally and internally.

 

Various tenement styles can be found all over Glasgow’s Southside. A cluster of Glasgow’s celebrated architect Alexander ‘Greek’ Thomson’s tenements can be found in chapter five of our book South Glasgow Heritage Trails: A Guide covering Shawlands, Strathbungo and Crossmyloof, centred around Salisbury Quadrant/Crescent and Nithsdale Drive. Though built after Thomson’s death in 1875, the convex building of Salisbury Quadrant showcases stone ornaments typical of Thomson’s Neo Grecian style and has particularly beautifully decorated corbels above the doors.

 

Thomson’s tenements were dotted over the Southside to accommodate a growing middle and upper-middle class who could commute across the Clyde into the city. During the 1960s / ’70s the tenements beside Thomson’s Caledonia Road Church (1856 -1857) were demolished as part of the Bruce Report initiative which aimed to create a modern post-war Glasgow, as well as examples along Eglinton St (1858) (formally Queen’s Park Terrace). Thankfully, however, many examples of Thomson’s tenements survive and can be found on Walmer Crescent in Ibrox, Darnley Street and Nithsdale Road in Strathbungo, and elsewhere. They display Thomson’s typical classical restraint with repetitive palmette motifs, pilasters and architraves carved from local blonde sandstone.

 

Victorian Era Tenements

 

The tenements along Queen’s Drive on the northern side of Queen’s Park show how different styles developed during the Victorian Era; while Thomson was inspired by Greek and Roman architecture, W.M Whyte takes inspiration from French Renaissance architecture. This French Renaissance Revival is typified by ​‘steep pitched roofs, or mansard roofs, often covered in slate tiles and dormer windows, small projecting spaces that stick out from the roof often with a vertical window. Buildings will often have large chimneys, cylindrical towers and turrets, small towers near the roofline. The towers and turrets might have circular tapering roofs topped with decorative elements. 

 

All of these features can be seen in Whyte’s tenement block on Queen’s Drive; decorative elements include the popular acanthus and a sculpture of what is believed to be Liberty, associating it further with the French revival style.

 

Burns suggests Queen’s Drive is ‘a prime example of the newly emerged Glasgow Freestyle that allowed the incorporation of various influences, yet shared standard features with other tenements of the time.’

 

Queen’s Drive Tenements

 

Art Nouveau

 

Camphill Avenue (1903) on the opposite side of Queen’s Park shows yet another style adopted into the Glasgow Tenement form. Designed by architect John Campbell McKellar – who designed 640 buildings between 1890 and the early 1900s mostly in Glasgow’s West End (in fact an almost exact floor plan can be found in Hyndland) – Camphill Avenue takes inspiration from Art Nouveau.

 

The eye is drawn upwards through elongated windows and arched features. Stained glass in Art Nouveau style flood closes with warm yellow light, and small square windows in the front and back doors are reminiscent of Mackintosh. Care has also been taken to include intricate floral details in the buildings’ air grilles; some original examples still remain today.

 

Camphill Avenue tenements looking south

 

Camphill Avenue

 

Wally Closes

 

Decoration, though, was not only reserved for the finest of Glasgow’s tenements. Examples of decorative features which serve to enhance the experience of our home can be seen across our tenement stock, including most famously in the ‘wally close’. Wally -​ as in china or pottery – along the close were added for hygienic reasons, however they also tell a story of which street or block the building is on, or what era it belongs to.

 

Tenement tiles in a South Glasgow wally close
Art Nouveau tiled wally close in Govanhill

 

Before the closure of Glasgow clay pipe factories in the 1960s those without formally tiled closes would at times decorate their own. 

 

“Each tenant or owner on each stair landing was obliged to take her turn of washing the stair on a Friday night. This was done by dissolving pipe clay in the wash bucket, giving the surface of the stair stone a thin film of either red or white pipe clay. The process was usually finished by decorating the edges of the stairs with the solid block of pipe clay, the chalked pattern lasting for a week until the next resident took her ‘turn of the stair’. Many women were at great pains to draw distinctive patterns – sometimes loops or zig-zags or even flowers – which were locally recognisable as theirs.”

 

 People’s Pictures: The Story of Tiles in Glasgow. Elspeth King. 

 

 

 

This picture taken recently on Bolton Drive shows tenement pride is alive and well with hand-drawn decoration filling in the spaces where tiles have been damaged.

 

 

It’s clear that by the late 1880s Glasgow had confidently adopted the tenement as their own. It is a relationship which continued to develop and grow throughout the 20th Century and has seen many iterations based on its three to five-storey form whether in white sandstone or red, concrete or brick.

 

Tenement Maintenance and Improvement

 

However, tenements were and at times can still be difficult places to live in. Poor management, substandard building materials, lack of regular maintenance or adherence to building regulations resulted in poor standards of living for many in the 20th Century. Residents campaigned for their improvement, and in 1971 Assist Architects worked with Govan Housing on 10 Luath St to initiate improvements using a bottom-up approach after the Great Storm.

 

Since those times, we have continued to adapt and change the tenement to suit our needs and improve our lives, changing bed recesses for indoor bathrooms or open plan kitchens looking out to the living rooms. Closes and backyards remain a place of communal interaction as people navigate shared space, what to do with it, how to maintain it and how to make the best of it. I feel lucky to be sharing one of these special spaces and find comfort in knowing that many of us though isolated are somewhat together, with our neighbours above and below, awkwardly meeting in stairwells and sharing messages of care.

 

Image from Glasgow City HeritageTrust Twitter https://twitter.com/GlasgowHeritage/status/99241607288730419

 

Tenements and the COVID-19 lockdown

 

As the lockdown response to COVID-19 continues and evolves, South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust (SGHET) is seeking to build a picture of the resilience of local city life south of the Clyde as our diverse communities adapt locally to the global pandemic – with public input. Read our lockdown project blog post.

To piece together the new experiences, habits and feelings of the moment, SGHET is inviting residents of South Glasgow to share photos from everyday life on social media – images captured by Southsiders that reflect how their lives are being re-shaped and neighbourhood moods and activities are changing in this new situation.

Images can be shared on social media using the hashtags #SouthsideLockdownLens or #SouthGlasgowLockdown – or by emailing SGHET direct (info@sghet.com). How are Southsiders making the new norms of social distancing, social isolation, working/studying/schooling from home (and other new realities) manageable… what’s keeping you afloat, giving you hope, helping you cope and get through this?

 

By Sarah Diver

 

Sources: 

John Joseph Burns: Tenement, An Architectural History. Published by Glasgow City Heritage Press 2019.
People’s Pictures: The Story of Tiles in Glasgow, Elspeth King. Published by Glasgow Museums 1991
Assist Architects: The Tenement Handbook A Practical Guide to Living in a Tenement. Published by RIAS 1992
South Glasgow Heritage Trails: A Guide, South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust, 2019.
Scotcities​ Gerald Blaikie
Bygone Bungo Blog Andrew Downie 

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South Glasgow seen through the Lockdown lens https://sghet.com/south-glasgow-seen-through-the-lockdown-lens/ https://sghet.com/south-glasgow-seen-through-the-lockdown-lens/#comments Wed, 06 May 2020 09:00:13 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=7270 As the lockdown response to COVID-19 continues and evolves, South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust (SGHET) is seeking to build a picture of the resilience of local life as our diverse community adapts locally to the global pandemic – with your input. To piece together the new experiences, habits and feelings of the moment, we […]

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As the lockdown response to COVID-19 continues and evolves, South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust (SGHET) is seeking to build a picture of the resilience of local life as our diverse community adapts locally to the global pandemic – with your input.

To piece together the new experiences, habits and feelings of the moment, we invite residents of South Glasgow to share photos from everyday life – images captured by you that reflect how it is being re-shaped and our moods and activities are changing in this new situation.

The new rhythms of life under lockdown…

How are you making the new norms of social distancing, social isolation, working/studying/schooling from home (and other new realities) manageable… what’s keeping you afloat, giving you hope, helping you cope and get through this?

What do you appreciate about your local area now that you spend most or all of your time in it… have your feelings changed about it?

Examples of things to share

Indoors: what activities are helping you or your family pass the time? What’s comforting or inspiring you and making lockdown bearable?

For example: art & drawing, games, decorating, cooking, family hairdressing, gardening, revisiting old stuff, exploring family history or heirlooms, mending things, making or getting into new things…

Outdoors: what do you see on your essential trips outside that strikes you or lifts your mood? What are you noticing?

For example: nature, parks, buildings, street scenes, new routes, pets on their walk, sunsets, skylines, chalked messages & games, posters, acts of kindness, community support projects, open & closed shops, cafes or pubs, traffic-free roads, other details large or small that catch your eye…

How to contribute…

• Share your photos (and any remarks you want to make about them) with us on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter using the hashtags #SouthGlasgowLockdown or #SouthsideLockdownLens – or just post them to our timelines or by tagging us if that’s easier.

• You can also email us your images direct to info@sghet.com with a short description or anything you want to say about them.

• Got any questions? You can ask questions about or comment on the project on social media or by email.

We look forward to seeing your photos and getting a flavour of how the Southside is keeping on, staying safe, finding hope and sustaining itself through this new COVID-19 era.

Ultimately we plan to create a community archive of this project, to document this period for the future. Join us in taking the first step!

Note: We appreciate and respect that this is a troubling time for many, and some may not feel like contributing or be able to. If you’d rather just keep in touch, you can find us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram or sign up for our email newsletter.

Below are some photos from the SGHET team… we look forward to seeing yours.

 

By Deirdre Molloy, 6th May 2020

 

Stay strong chalked on wall beside Queen's Park Rose Garden

‘Stay strong’ chalked with art on wall beside Queen’s Park Rose Garden – spotted by Jen

Rainbow window display former British Linen Bank (over Halloumi) on Pollokshaws Rd

Rainbow window display, former British Linen Bank (flats over Halloumi) Pollokshaws Rd – spotted by Deirdre

Learning to knit during lockdown

Learning to knit during lockdown – photo by Romy

Together we can do anything banner in Maxwell Park

‘Together we can do anything’ banner in Maxwell Park – spotted by Saskia

Fear not we will return sign at Hell Yeah, Pollokshaws Rd

‘Fear not we will return’ sign at boarded-up Hell Yeah shop, Shawlands – spotted by Deirdre

Painted Stones at Queen's Park Flag Pole

‘We need rainbows’ painted Stones at Queen’s Park Flag Pole – spotted by Jen

Volunteer poster for Glasgow Mutual Aid

Volunteer posters for Glasgow Mutual Aid – photo by Sarah

Using wild Garlic foraged at Pollok Park to make Pesto and Focaccia by Romy

Using wild garlic foraged at Pollok Park to make pesto and focaccia – photo by Romy

Den made from cut down trees in Queen's Park

Den made from cut down trees in Queen’s Park – spotted by Jen

Temporary home studio in the spare room

Temporary home studio in the spare room – photo by Sarah

Social distancing sign at Pollok Park gates Haggs Rd

Social distancing sign at Pollok Park gates Haggs Rd entrance – spotted by Deirdre

Regrettable quarantine haircuts

Regrettable quarantine haircuts – photo by Romy

Cycling and discovering new parts of local parks: sculpture installation in Bellahouston Park

Cycling & discovering new parts of local parks: sculpture installation in Bellahouston Park spotted by Romy

Sign at Prince & Princess of Wales Hospice charity shop, Pollokshaws Rd

Sign at Prince & Princess of Wales Hospice charity shop, Pollokshaws Rd spotted by Deirdre

[Other images: trying to propogate cuttings from Southside walks by Sarah; Love NHS chalked at Camphill House in Queen’s Park by Deirdre]

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