Pricing Change
New pricing for orders of material from this site will come into place shortly. Charges for supply of digital images, digitisation on demand, prints and licensing will be altered.
Archaeology Notes
Event ID 843085
Category Descriptive Accounts
Type Archaeology Notes
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/843085
NS56NE 88.02 56355 65618
Formerly entered as NS56NE 2150.
Hydraulic Pumping Station, Queen's Dock, built 1877-8 for the Clyde Navigation Trust, J Carrick, architect. A single storey, 2- by 3-bay building, with pedimented gables and round headed windows. Adjacent to the north is a similar flat-roofed building and a four storey accumulator tower with a clock, built in the style of an Italian campanile.
This station powered cranes and a swing bridge (NS56NE 88.01).
J R Hume 1974.
On the W edge of the car park for the Scottish Exhibition Centre, the dock's former hydraulic pumping station of 1877 by John Carrick (City Engineer), tiny beside its spreading neighbour, but with its Italian facade and accumulator tower disguised as a campanile, happliy distinctive. Converted to a restaurant, with a conservatory-like extension by the Miller Partnership, 1988.
E Williamson, A Riches and M Higgs 1990.
This building is situated on the N side of the entrance to Queen's Dock; it is depicted (but not noted) on the 1969 edition of the OS 1:1250 map. Following conversion, it is open to the public as a museum building associated with the display of the SV Glenlee, berthed immediately downstream (to the NW) at Yorkhill Quay.
Information from RCAHMS (RJCM), 15 February 2006.