Dalmarnock (, ) is a district in the Scotland city of Glasgow. It is situated east of the city centre, directly north of the River Clyde opposite the town of Rutherglen. It is also bounded by the Glasgow neighbourhoods of Parkhead to the north-east and Bridgeton to the north-west.
The east side of Allan Street was bombed during the Second World War. Most of the Victorian red sandstone tenements on Dalmarnock Road and Springfield Road were demolished in the 1960s and early-1970s, although some were renovated as part of the Glasgow Eastern Area Renewal (GEAR) scheme in the late 1970s. In the 1960s, a new housing scheme was built, consisting of four twenty-two storey tower blocks and "H-block" maisonettes. Two of the towers, 40 & 50 Millerfield Road, were demolished on 3 February 2002. One other tower was demolished on 1 July 2007, and the final one on 9 September 2007. This physical transformation featured in Chris Leslie's 'Disappearing Glasgow' book.
Dalmarnock was the location chosen for the athletes' village when Glasgow hosted the 2014 Commonwealth Games, and by August 2011, there was no remaining housing on Ardenlea Street/Sunnybank Street side of the area, due to the preparations and land need for the construction in the area pertaining to the Games and City Legacy.
From 19 May to 2 June 2014, BBC One Scotland aired a documentary entitled "Commonwealth City", narrated by actor Martin Compston, which showed how the people and community in Dalmarnock had been affected since the games were announced in November 2007. The documentary featured local resident Margaret Jaconelli (evicted to make way for the Games), David Stewart (youth and community campaigner) Darren Faulds (local entrepreneur) and local councillors George Redmond & Yvonne Kucuk.
The Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome, constructed for the Games, is located at the intersection of Springfield Road, London Road and the Glasgow East End Regeneration Route, opposite Celtic Park football stadium which denotes the district's boundary with Parkhead. A triangular piece of land to the east of the arena was the proposed location of a modern skyscraper, East One; however as of 2020 this site was still undeveloped. To the south of this is the 'Legacy Hub' building, a multi-function community facility belatedly installed to replace the previous hall at Lily Street. It opened in 2015 Legacy Hub, Dalmarnock , Clyde Gateway but by January 2019 had closed suddenly amid financial problems at the People's Development Trust charity which ran its operations; Parents' anger at Glasgow nursery closed without notice, BBC News, 27 January 2019 Commonwealth games legacy hub in Dalmarnock closes after financial problems, Evening Times, 27 January 2019 the council purchased the building to secure its future, Council agrees to buy The Legacy Hub in Dalmarnock, Glasgow City Council, 7 February 2019 Glasgow to deliver £20m community hubs investment, PBC Today, 6 June 2019 while an investigation found funds had been embezzled by charity leaders including former councillor Yvonne Kucuk. Ex-Glasgow councillor guilty of taking £8,000 charity cash, BBC News, 30 April 2019
Clyde Gateway is a large-scale regeneration programme which includes Dalmarnock. It is a partnership between Glasgow City Council, South Lanarkshire Council and Scottish Enterprise, backed by funding and direct support from the Scottish Government. Home Page, Clyde Gateway Residential developments in the area following the Commonwealth Games include Riverside, About the development, Riverside Dalmarnock South Dalmarnock Integrated Urban Infrastructure, Sheppard Robson Dalmarnock Housing Development Fly-Through Released, McTaggart Group, 4 September 2018 a project on the site of the former large power station overlooking the river (approximately 550 homes for purchase and social rent), Homes planned for Dalmarnock Power Station site, BBC News, 28 April 2015 and a site near the railway station (200 homes, in planning as of 2018). Plans for over 200 homes to be built on derelict site in east end, Glasgow Live, 5 September 2018
After the departure of all local retailers from the area, all that remained was a small shop which was set up by the workers in the Community Centre; This was a welcome boon for the area residents as the nearest shops were not within walking distance. There is a petrol station on Dalmarnock Road and a car wash, with a pub a short distance further north past the railway station (this has been the location of a licensed premises under various names since the 1830s). The Hayfield, Old Glasgow Pubs Still Game's Jane McCarry gets ghostbusting with paranormal investigators at 'haunted' Glasgow pub, Glasgow Live, 22 January 2018 Dalmarnock boozer tells punters it will now be a Rangers bar ahead of Old Firm, Evening Times, 30 August 2019 There are also a lot of small business units in the Nuneaton Street area and the Calder Millerfield factory which supplies meat-based products to the fast-food market.
The Glasgow side of the bridge is a convenient point for walkers and cyclists to join the Clyde Walkway or National Cycle Route 75 which share a tarmac path along the river at this point.
This structure should not be confused with the nearby Rutherglen Bridge which also connects Rutherglen and Dalmarnock (as well as Glasgow Green, Oatlands, Shawfield and Bridgeton), nor with two modern pedestrian bridges: one also connecting to Shawfield, and the other between the 2014 Athletes' Village homes and the Cuningar Loop, an area of open ground on a meander of the river, known locally as 'The Vallies' and converted to a park as part of the area's redevelopment).
Education
Transport
Dalmarnock Railway Bridges
Dalmarnock Bridge
Notable people
See also
External links
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