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Glasgow

Glasgow (Glaschu in Scottish Gaelic, or Glesga in Scottish), officially City of Glasgow, is a city and council in Scotland, United Kingdom. It is the largest city in Scotland and the third in the United Kingdom after London and Birmingham, and is the most populous council and the tenth most populous metropolitan area in the United Kingdom in its Greater Glasgow conurbation, after Greater London. It is located on the banks of the Clyde River in the Lowlands of Scotland. The people of Glasgow are known as Glaswegians. Also, Glaswegian is the name by which the local Scottish dialect is known.
Formerly, it was a royal burgh (royal city), and was known as the "second city of the British Empire" in the Victorian era. It was erected as a large transatlantic trade port during the Industrial Revolution. The Clyde was one of the world's most prominent shipyard centers, building many of the revolutionary and famous ships of the Cunard line such as RMS Lusitania, RMS Aquitaine, RMS Queen Mary, RMS Queen Elizabeth and RMS Queen Elizabeth 2, and the Royal Sailboat Britannia.
The city grew at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century until it reached a population of more t ...

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32 Victoria Crescent Road

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Lomond Serviced Apartments- Merchant's

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Park Mews

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Stunning Glasgow City Centre Apartment

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Glasgow art school

The Glasgow School of Art (Glasgow School of Art in English) was an important center of dissemination of modern architecture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
The rejection of the arts of the past also affected architecture. In Glasgow a new type of building planning was developed, which unlike Modernism, fled from ornamentation and non-rational volumes. The orthogonal iron structure gave a greater resistance, but also allowed a greater organization of the plants. The walls are smooth, in stone, and there are large glass surfaces.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh highlighted this ...

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Great glasgow

Greater Glasgow and Clyde is a high-level administrative subdivision that covers the city of Glasgow in Scotland (United Kingdom). It is one of the fourteen regions of Scotland.
The administrative area of Greater Glasgow covers the conurbation of the City of Glasgow and the councils of Renfrewshire, Dunbartonshire and Inverclyde, as well as other annexed municipalities known generically as Glasgow. It covers an area of 378.5 km² and has an approximate population of 2,271,830 people, thus forming the second most important metropolitan area in the United Kingdom. This demographic concentration i ...

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Glasgow Royal Theater

The Royal Theater in Glasgow is the oldest theater in the city of Glasgow, Scotland, located on Hope Street at 282 in Cowcaddens. The theater was originally opened in 1867, changing its name to the Royal Theater in 1869. It is the place where Howard and Wyndham Ltd emerged, the owners and managers of theaters in Scotland and England during the 20th century, an institution created by its president Baillie Michael Simons who also promoted the construction of the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum and the Glasgow International Exhibition of 1888 (the International Hall of Science, Art and Industr ...

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Garnethill Synagogue

The Garnethill Synagogue (in English: Garnethill Synagogue) is a historic synagogue of Scotland in the United Kingdom. It is located in Garnethill, in the city of Glasgow.
The synagogue was designed by John McLeod and Nathan S. Joseph and built between 1879 and 1881.
The exterior of the building is from the Romanesque revival. With the shape of a basilica, it has an interior orientalist style that has details of the Byzantine revival. Particularly notable is the splendid Torah Ark, designed by Nathan and which closely resembles the Ark he designed for the New West End London Synagogue.

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Blythswood Square

Blythswood Square (in English: Blythswood Square) is a square in the area of ​​Blythswood Hill in the city of Glasgow in Scotland north of the United Kingdom. The square was built as part of an expansion to the west of central Glasgow. The square was originally intended by Georgian and intellectual architects of the time as the "new" center of the city, and while this is largely true from a geographical point of view, George Square, which is in front of the "Glasgow City Chambers" remains the "official Glasgow" center.
Today the square is mainly led by office buildings distributed with origina ...

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Glasgow City Hall Building

The Glasgow City Hall building in Scotland has functioned as the headquarters of the Glasgow City Council since 1996, and in pre-existing forms of city government since 1889. This building is located in the eastern part of George Square (George Square). The building is a leading example of Victorian civic architecture. It was built between 1882 and 1888 on a design by Scottish architect William Young, originally from Paisley, who won a contest.
The building was inaugurated in August 1888 by Queen Victoria, the first council meeting in the building was held in October 1889. Originally the build ...

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Wellington Statue

The Wellington Statue (in English: Wellington Statue) is a monument that normally features a traffic cone on its head, in the Royal Exchange Square in Glasgow, Scotland, being one of the most emblematic figures of the city. In 2011, the Lonely Planet guide included the monument to Arthur Wellesley, first Duke of Wellington, on his list of the "10 strangest monuments on Earth," along with the Rocky Balboa statue in Zitiste, Serbia, and the Cathedral Washington National in the United States. Located in front of the Gallery of Modern Art and at one end of Ingramla Street, the equestrian statue of ...

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Livingstone tower

The Livingstone Tower (in English: Livingstone Tower) is a mid-rise skyscraper in Glasgow, Scotland that is part of Strathclyde University on the John Anderson campus, one of the 2 campuses run by the university. The building is named after David Livingstone. The address of the building is 26 Richmond Street, Glasgow.
The building is a notable landmark on the east side of the city center, and its high position in the Rottenrow drumlin implies that it can be seen from a considerable distance throughout the city. It was also one of the earliest high-rise commercial buildings to observe in the ci ...

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Clydesdale Bank

Clydesdale Bank is a commercial bank in Scotland. Formed in Glasgow in 1838, it is the smallest of three Scottish banks. It was independent until it was bought by the Midland Bank in 1920 and was sold to its current owners, the National Bank of Australia (NAB) in 1987. It shares a banking license with another British NAB subsidiary, the Yorkshire Bank, although the license is in the hands of Clydesdale.
Like the other two Scottish banks, the Bank of Scotland and The Royal Bank of Scotland, reserves the right to issue their own bills.

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Royal Glasgow Concert Hall

The Royal Glasgow Concert Hall (in English: Glasgow Royal Concert Hall) is an artistic venue, in the city of Glasgow, Scotland, in the United Kingdom. It is operated by Glasgow Life, an agency of the Glasgow City Council, which also runs other local organizations. The Caterin Department is operated by Encore Hospitality. Planned as the Glasgow International Concert Hall and built in the late 1980s with a design by John Leslie Martin, the building was officially inaugurated in October 1990, after what had been a controversial, troubled construction program Technical and financial.

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Royal Conservatory of Scotland

The Royal Conservatory of Scotland, (in English "Royal Conservatoire of Scotland" and in Gaelic Scottish: Rìoghail na h-Alba Conservatory) formerly called Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts, is a conservatory of dance, interpretation, music, production and Film direction in the center of Glasgow, Scotland. Founded in 1845 as the Glasgow Educational Association, it is the most active performing arts center in Scotland, above 500 public performances every year.
The current director is pianist Jeffrey Sharkey, the president is Cameron Mackintosh, and is under the board of es S.A.R. ...

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Glasgow Central Station

Glasgow Central Station (in English, Glasgow Central Station, in Scottish Gaelic, Glaschu Mheadhain, in Scottish (Germanic language), Central Glesga) is the main railway station in Glasgow, Scotland. The station was opened by Caledonian Railway on July 31, 1879 and is one of nineteen managed by Network Rail. It is the north terminal of the West Coast Main Line (640 km north of London Euston), And for interurban services between Glasgow and England.
With almost 29 million passengers in 2014-15, Glasgow Central is the eleventh busiest train station in the United Kingdom. According to Network Rai ...

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