The Undiscovered Mackintosh of Glasgow City Centre
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Scotland’s Centre for Architecture and Design within a Mackintosh building (1893-95)
4 minOriginally a furniture warehouse designed by John Honeyman (1872)
2 minOriginally a warehouse block designed by Alexander & George Thomson (1858-59)
2 minCity’s Main Railway Station designed by Robert Rowand Anderson (finished 1905)
2 minOriginal Daily Record office and warehouse building designed by Mackintosh (1901-04)
2 minAn ornate red sandstone created by William Salmon, James Salmon’s father in 1894.
1 minAnother building by Salmon & Gillespie Designed in 1898-99.
2 minA highly innovative building by James Salmond, built in 1904-07.
2 minExample of the Glasgow Style by Salmon & Gillespie on Hope/ W. Regent St, 1900-04.
1 minA link too good to pass by, the offices of John Keppie descendants.
52 sThis famous doorway was one of Mackintosh’s last commissions in Glasgow (1908)
1 minThe first home of Mackintosh and Margaret from 1901-06.
2 minA building with features added in 1893 only recently credited to Mackintosh.
2 minOriginal location of the Glasgow School of Art and Mackintosh Memorial Exhibitions
1 minA recently restored example of a 1903 tearoom designed by the Mackintosh’s.
6 minThis walk explores Mackintosh’s hidden architectural projects around Glasgow’s city centre. By delving into Mackintosh’s early career during an era of booming design, you’ll discover the architecture which shaped a post-victorian Glasgow and the Mackintosh legacy. Join the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society volunteer guides as they take it in turns to describe the history behind each building. The walk begins at the bottom of the lighthouse on Mitchell lane, and ends on Sauchiehall Street outside Mackintosh at the Willow.