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   » » Wiki: Glasgow Harbour
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Glasgow Harbour is a private sector urban regeneration scheme at in the West End of the city of , . It is not the history and development of the wider and internationally famous Glasgow Harbour from Glasgow Green to Clydebank which developed from the early 1800s and witnessed the birth and growth of modern shipbuilding and shipping.


Construction
After many years of dereliction caused by the decline of shipbuilding and the migration of Glasgow's docks to the Firth of Clyde, since the mid-1980s the banks of the at Glasgow have become a focus for property developers. Mirroring the scheme, the old docks, and sites of old granaries, wharves and shipyards in Glasgow are being redeveloped into up-market residential apartments, office complexes and leisure facilities.

The earliest developments were the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre (SECC) at the former Queen's Dock in 1985, and the Glasgow Garden Festival at the former Prince's Dock in 1988, which demonstrated the potential of the riverside area as a catalyst for urban regeneration. Through the 1990s, riverside apartment buildings began to appear at Lancefield Quay on the North bank and the former General Terminus Quay on the South bank, and the Norman Foster-designed was opened at the SECC in 1997. The former Garden Festival site is now home to the Glasgow Science Centre including (the tallest structure in the city and the spiritual successor to the tower which was part of the Garden Festival). There has been further development at this site, with new headquarters for and Scottish Television at forming the cornerstone of a new "media village".


Buildings and phases
Phase 1 of the Glasgow Harbour Project, by the Clyde Port Authority at the former Meadowside Granary, Yorkhill Quay and confluence of the in , has consisted of high rise residential accommodation and the construction of a riverside walkway.

The wider area now includes the (the city's new Museum of Transport) adjacent to the mouth of the River Kelvin, and there are plans for large-scale commercial developments at the site.

In September 2006, the road bridge opened to traffic, enhancing access to the South Bank at the SECC, while the existing Clydeside Expressway (A814) connects the Harbour area to Glasgow city centre and the . Transport links will also be a key feature of Glasgow Harbour in the future, with a pre- system planned, to be called , which will link the area to the city centre areas, with possible interchanges to the . An intermittent ferry service operates between the Riverside Museum and on the south bank.


See also
  • Clyde Waterfront Regeneration
  • Housing in Glasgow
  • List of tallest buildings and structures in Glasgow


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