Argyle Building, Glasgow

The Argyle Building is a mid-rise residential skyscraper in the Anderston district within the centre of Glasgow, Scotland. Started in 2005 and completed in 2008, it is among the highest buildings currently standing within the city's central area and occupies a prominent spot next to the Kingston Bridge and the M8 motorway. It can be seen prominently in the background of BBC Scotland television news bulletins.[1][2]

Argyle Building
The Argyle Building, with the Anderston Centre towers to the immediate left.
General information
StatusComplete
TypeResidential
Architectural styleModernist
Address490 Argyle Street
Town or cityAnderston, Glasgow
CountryScotland
Construction started2005
Completed2008
Height62 m (203 ft)
Technical details
Floor count21
Lifts/elevators2
Design and construction
Architecture firmAedas Architects
Main contractorTaylor Wimpey Ltd

Background

The Argyle Building was conceived as part of the regeneration of the Anderston Centre complex which was built around the turn of the 1970s, which had steadily fallen into partial dereliction. The tower was part of wider gentrification efforts to regenerate the Anderston area as part of the Glasgow International Financial Services District initiative, thereby encouraging young professionals to live as well as work in the area. The tower forms part of the Cuprum office development, which occupies the lower four levels and adjoins directly onto its eastern side. The building is of largely Modernist in its design, and has features which are intended to mimic the style of the Anderston Centre's tower blocks which stand directly adjacent.[3][4]

gollark: Broccoli, more like 1819824 apioform.
gollark: zstd supports custom dictionaries, as I said, and apparently can have really good compression ratios if you tune it right.
gollark: > Brotli is a data format specification[2] for data streams compressed with a specific combination of the general-purpose LZ77 lossless compression algorithm, Huffman coding and 2nd order context modelling. Brotli is a compression algorithm developed by Google and works best for text compression. ħmm, apparently maybe ish?
gollark: Or brotli with a custom dictionary, actually.
gollark: You could use zstd with a custom dictionary?

See also

References

  1. "Taylor Wimpey - The Argyle Building - GSPC - Glasgow ..." gspc.co.uk. Archived from the original on 11 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  2. "Final duo left at The Argyle Building in Glasgow". taylorwimpey.co.uk. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  3. "Argyle Street | Glasgow History". glasgowhistory.com. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  4. "Argyle Building, Glasgow". linernotes.com. Retrieved 11 March 2014.

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