Lilybank is a neighbourhood in the east of Glasgow, Scotland. Neighbouring areas Newbank to the west, Braidfauld to the east and the eastern part of Parkhead to the north. The A74 London Road runs to the south, with the land on the opposite side between the road and the River Clyde not used for residential purposes: the Barrowfield football training ground owned by Celtic F.C., and the Dewar's whisky bottling plant and warehouses, the latter on the former Westthorn country estate. Westthorn House (Glasgow University Library, Special Collections, Dougan Collection, 1870), The Glasgow Story Harvey's Dyke (Burrell Collection Photo Library, 1890s), The Glasgow Story
In a wider sense, many residents of Lilybank would consider themselves residents of Parkhead or Tollcross, but they were officially placed within the Braidfauld ward of Glasgow City Council from 1995 to 2007; Glasgow City Council area Electoral arrangements (3rd Review) Ward 45 Braidfauld, Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland since then, the neighbourhood (west of Maukinfauld Road) has been in the Calton ward, while surrounding streets to the north and east fall under Shettleston ward.
Most blocks were demolished in the 1990s and replaced by modern housing. At the time of the construction of the original housing, the small ground of Parkhead F.C., Helenslea Park, was located to the west between Lilybank and Newbank; the club went defunct in the 1960s and the football pitch is no longer present, but it has been retained as an open public park; the only buildings on the site in the 2010s are named after Helenslea: a nursery school and community centre. Dance in Helenslea Community Hall is going 'on tour' around Glasgow, Evening Times, 17 April 2018
Parkhead Fire station was also located in Lilybank from 1952 until 2011. V06 Parkhead, The History of Scottish Fire Brigades Parkhead Community Fire Station, Parkhead History
In 1977, the neighbourhood was subject of a BBC Television documentary made by social activist Kay Carmichael, who lived on benefits in the community for some months while being recorded on hidden cameras to find out about the conditions for the city's poor; Watching Ourselves: 60 Years of TV in Scotland: Lilybank - The Fourth World, BBC, 18 April 2012 local residents were unimpressed at the unflattering way the area was portrayed. Decades before The Scheme, another Scots community suffered the TV treatment, Daily Record, 27 June 2010
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