Duke Street, Glasgow

Duke Street is a street in Glasgow, Scotland. It runs from the city centre to the East End, from High Street through the residential district of Dennistoun, past The Forge Shopping Centre, meeting the Gallowgate, Tollcross Road and Westmuir Street to form a turreted Edwardian junction at Parkhead Cross. It takes its name from the Duke of Montrose.

Duke Street
Former Duke Street Hospital
Length2.0 mi (3.2 km)
Coordinates55.85978°N 4.23513°W / 55.85978; -4.23513
west end A8
east end A89

From 1460 to 1870, the original buildings of the University of Glasgow were located at the junction of High Street and Duke Street before it moved to the West End..[1][2][3] The site was then turned into the College Goods yard by the City of Glasgow Union Railway[4][5][6][7] before it was closed in 1968 in the wake of the Beeching Axe. The wall of the goods warehouse with its distinctive arched windows still faces onto this section of Duke Street, preserved as part of a new office block within the Collegelands development, which also includes highrise parking and student accommodation with a planned hotel complex.[8][9][10]

Boundary wall of High Street Goods Yard, 2008
New office buildings incorporating the wall at same location above, 2018

Glasgow's infantry barracks was also built adjacent to the University, between Duke Street and the Gallowgate, in 1795. It could accommodate up to 1,000 men but, by the mid-19th century, the buildings were in a dire condition. In 1872, new barracks were completed in the suburb of Maryhill. The site was also used as part of the College goods yard site.[11]

The new Glasgow Meat Market and Abattoir was opened at the corner of Duke Street and Bellgrove Street in Calton, in the 1970s after the original meat market in the nearby Gallowgate, which dated from 1879, closed. It operated for many years as a car auction. The new meat market closed in July 2001 and was demolished in 2007, with a new residential development constructed on the site that retained the old market's two listed Victorian entrance archways.

From 1798 to 1957, Duke Street was best known for being the location of Duke Street Prison before it was demolished in 1958, making way for the Ladywell housing scheme built on the site from 1961 to 1964.[12] It still stands, but the only remaining structure of Duke Street Prison is some of the boundary wall.[13]

Refurbished multi-storey flats at Ladywell (2013)

Today, landmarks on Duke Street include the A-listed Ladywell Business Centre, originally designed by John Burnet in 1858 as the Alexanders Endowed School, Tennents' Wellpark Brewery, the nearby Glasgow Necropolis and the A-listed former Sydney Place United Presbyterian Church, now vacant, which was damaged in a fire but was restored by the Glasgow Building Preservation Trust in 1996 as an extension to the Wellpark Enterprise Centre.[14] There is also a large British Bakeries factory and the Great Eastern Hotel at no. 100, which was a notorious common lodging house but is now being converted into apartments. There was also the Eastern District Hospital, latterly known as Duke Street Hospital, before it closed 1994, when it was converted into flats. The area is served by High Street railway station, Bellgrove railway station and Duke Street railway station.

See also

  • Glasgow tower blocks

References

  1. "Glasgow, High Street, Old College". canmore.org.uk. Retrieved 4 October 2019.
  2. Old College (Mitchell Library, Glasgow Collection, late 1660s), The Glasgow Story
  3. Old College (Mitchell Library, Joseph Swan, 1821), The Glasgow Story
  4. "TheGlasgowStory: College Goods Station". The Glasgow Story. Retrieved 4 October 2019.
  5. High Street, 1900 (Mitchell Library, Glasgow Collection, Postcards Collection), the Glasgow Story
  6. High Street Goods, RailScot
  7. Glasgow, 208 High Street, High Street Goods Station, Canmore
  8. "Collegelands". Archived from the original on 16 May 2014. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
  9. Collegelands office scheme opens its doors, Urban Realm, 2 February 2012
  10. "New Collegelands business and residential site to open in city centre". STV News. 2 February 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2019.
  11. Glasgow Infantry Barracks
  12. Memories: Duke Street Ladywell Housing and it rained in 1957, Evening Times, 12 January 2016
  13. Elizabeth Williamson, Anne Riches & Malcolm Higgs, The Buildings of Scotland: Glasgow. London: Penguin Books 1990. ISBN 0-14-071069-8
  14. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 7 June 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

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