Kasia Maciejowska
We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times
HOW IT RATES
Heart of the Scottish economy and source of leading artistic personalities,
Glasgow is a lively mix of contrasts: significant migration of home- grown
talent is combined with a large immigrant population, while cutting-edge
design and biotech innovation sit beside a rock-bottom standard of living in
some areas.
ARCHITECTURAL GEMS
The City Chambers on George Square is glorious inside and out. Charles Rennie
Mackintosh’s famous Glasgow School of Art building spearheaded Art Nouveau’s
integration into UK design. Mackintosh’s building and the Baroque
Kelvingrove Art Gallery were designed as the result of architectural
competitions around the start of the 20th century.
WHAT’S NEW
The Clydeside Harbour projects; Capitol Park has ten flats left and is due to
complete in April (Knight Frank 0141-221 9191). Bishop Loch (0141-353 6800)
is leading the pending five-year Graving Docks project. Divided between two
extremes. The West End contains one of Europe’s top universities, thronging
with bright young people in cafés and boutiques. Across town, areas of the
East End struggle with deprivation and the accompanying torments of bleak
tenement blocks and violent crime. The drive from Glasgow to London takes
about seven hours using the M74 to Carlisle, the M6 to Birmingham and the M1
to London. There are regular sleeper trains to London Euston; fast trains on
the West Coast Main Line take 4½ hours. Flights to Heathrow take about an
hour. In 2004 the population was 577,670. This is predicted to shrink
marginally to 577,367 by 2014, as people are having fewer children.
SMARTEST STREETS
Park Circus is a popular sweeping crescent built in 1860. Thornton Hall, on
the South Side, is full of millionaires, and there are gorgeous terraces in
the West End, particularly G12; a honeypot for wealthy intelligentsia.
BEST RESTAURANTS
Rogano is an elegant Art Deco place with a classic fish menu, popular for
champagne and oysters. A chic basement space on West George Street houses
Rococo, where subtle dishes come with a touch of flair. The Ubiquitous Chip
is an established favourite, famous for Scottish fare served with panache.
TOP NIGHTLIFE
Princes Square is a focal point with stylish bars. The Royal Scottish Arts and
Drama Centre and Scottish Opera at the Theatre Royal offer rich pickings.
The Citizens’ Theatre is also world-class. In city has spawned a number of
rock bands; see the next generation at King Tut’s Wa Wa Hut, where Oasis
were first offered a record deal.
EDUCATION
Glasgow University is the seventh oldest in the world. Glasgow HIgh School is
the top private school. Jordanhill School is the only fully grant-funded
school in Scotland, setting a template for Labour’s educational reform.
WORKING LIFE
Unemployment is high at 6.2 per cent; 19 per cent of workers are in business
and property, 15 per cent in health and social work, 15 per cent in
wholesale, retail and car trade.
UPSIDE
Scotland’s creative hub has an incredibly rich variety of art, from the
Gallery of Modern Art to the House for an Art Lover designed by Mackintosh.
Major works abound, including DalÍ’s John of the Cross at
the Kelvingrove and pieces by Degas and Cézanne at The Burrell Collection.
The West Highland Way is a 95-mile route, from Milngavie to Fort William,
popular with walkers.
DOWNSIDE
The regeneration of Clydeside has continued to struggle for years. Not having
the weather to support a waterside café culture and saddled with the decline
of its shipping industry, Clydeside is only just coming into its own as a
positive feature of the city.
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2006
£189,500
NW England
2008/08
£169,950
NW England
2007/57
£35,000
South East England
Great car insurance deals online
Circa £82,000 per annum
Birmingham Women's Hospital
Birmingham
To £28k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool/Teeside
£
Up to £66,000 per annum
Hertfordshire County Council
South East
To £38k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool
2 Bathrooms, Balcony and Garden
Beautiful Gardens w/ stunning Thames Views
Dining, Shopping & Riverside Pk
Mortgages, bank acc & money transfers to help you buy abroad
Glasgow restaurant and pub life particularly in West End and City Centre is second to none in UK. Transport to satelite areas is well served by rail and underground.
Main weakness is poor rail transport (non-existant) to Airport and road congestion at rush hour.
Graham Thomson, Helensburgh, Argyll & Bute