Mosspark

Mosspark (Scottish Gaelic: Pàirc na Mòna) is a district in the Scottish city of Glasgow. It is situated south of the River Clyde, in the southwest of the city.

Mosspark
  • Scottish Gaelic: Pàirc na Mòna
Mosspark
Location within Glasgow
OS grid referenceNS543632
Council area
Lieutenancy area
  • Glasgow
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGLASGOW
Postcode districtG52
Dialling code0141
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament

History

Mosspark and the lands of East and Mid-Henderston were incorporated into Glasgow in 1909.[1] They covered seventy-two hectares of farmland and their acquisition was prompted by the need to develop peripheral communities to help ease the city's notorious overcrowding. The First World War was crucially important in determining Mosspark's pioneering place in Glasgow Corporation's housing programme. In 1919, groundbreaking legislation made it compulsory for local authorities to implement planned housing schemes, underpinned by subsidies. As a result, Mosspark became the most ambitious of the Corporation's immediate post-war developments.

Postcard view of Mosspark Avenue

The housing density and extensive green space were inspired by Raymond Unwin and the Garden city movement.[1] The neighbourhood is almost unique within the surrounding area with its tree-lined streets and boulevard stretching the length of the area at its most northern point. Entirely residential, the scheme's green and semi-rural setting was intended to provide a healthier alternative to the city's traditional tenement landscape, which had become too much identified with urban corrosion.

The 1500 house development was built by the firm Mactaggart and Mickel,[2] with the local church also seen as an important consideration - its buildings on Ashkirk Drive were begun in 1927 and completed two years later.[3][4][5] Although flats featured in Mosspark's plans, two-thirds of the housing stock was built in the form of cottages, semi-detached and terraced, and surrounded by gardens. The dwellings were built to high standards with spacious rooms and modern conveniences including the clean new energy source of electricity. The allocation of tenancies was predominantly to "professional" and "skilled" strata,[6] and the area became and remained one of the most desirable for Corporation tenants.[7]

The district's exclusive character had arisen because it was generally not cost-effective for the Corporation to build such prestigious, low-density developments, especially in the depressed economic climate of the inter-war years. Mosspark was consequently a showpiece of modern planning in Glasgow, but it could not serve as a realistic blueprint for the Corporation's long-term housing strategy. Similar later housing schemes were built like Knightswood, although the blueprint was changed to cheaper building materials, fireplaces were removed from the bedrooms and interior walls were no longer brick.

Transport

To the North of Mosspark is Bellahouston Park and Paisley Canal railway line to the south which separates the area from Corkerhill. Oddly, the nearest train station is Corkerhill while Mosspark railway station more accurately serves South Cardonald and northern Pollok.

Facilities

The area has a great deal of amenities in spite of its rather small size, including a church, school, bowling club, several shops and a park directly facing the much grander Bellahouston Park. There are no public houses in Mosspark, the nearest being the Parkway Bar in Cardonald.

In late 2017, the local parish church closed and the congregation merged into another in Pollokshields[8] to form Sherbrooke Mosspark Church. The Category B Listed buildings were taken over and renovated by the Harvest Bible Chapel's Glasgow branch.[9]

  • Some outdoor portions of the sitcom Still Game were filmed in Mosspark.
  • The TV show Vids used an empty shop in Mosspark as the storefront in the show.

Notable people

Notes and references

  1. "Mosspark". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  2. Miskell, Louise (2000). "Review". Construction History. Construction History Society (subscription required). 16: 115–116. JSTOR 41613822.
  3. Memories: Mosspark Church in 1929, Glasgow Times, 12 May 2015
  4. 167 Ashkirk Drive, Mosspark Parish Church (Church of Scotland), Historic Environment Scotland
  5. 167 Ashkirk Drive, Mosspark Parish Church And Hall, Canmore
  6. Hughes, Annmarie (2010). Gender and Political Identities in Scotland, 1919-1939. Edinburgh University Press. p. 66.
  7. Pacione, Michael. Urban Geography: A Global Perspective. Routledge.
  8. Mosspark residents set to lose vital facilities as church moves to sell off property, Glasgow Times, 12 September 2017
  9. Welcome, Harvest Church Glasgow
gollark: <@374207156268040214> WHERE ARE THE KIOSKS?
gollark: I run Lineage on a Wileyfox Swift 2.
gollark: You mean “all hail supreme overlord Bixby”?
gollark: I can probably add support for downloading the entire source of Linux.
gollark: PotatOS is a linux distro too.
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