NameDouglas
Area CoveredGlasgow
InterestsFood, Architecture, Photography, History, Local traditions, Walking, Nature & wildlife, Train travel, Travel writing, Guided walks & tours

Introducing Douglas - your Friend at the other End!

My Video

About Me

Glasgow is my hometown
Why come to my home city of Glasgow . Well there`s many reasons .Shopping seems to seems to be high up in visitors choices.
The Siteseeing is fab and most attractions are free.
Great places to eat and we are the curry capital of the United Kingdom .
The people are a friendly and fun. Please come and see for yourself.

The city has moved on from the days of the grey industrial city to tourist friendlyplace to visit.

The regeneration of Glasgow has focused on the River Clyde and has created iconic structures such as the Armadillo. Let West end walks show you how the city is changing into one of the most modern places in Europe.

I`m Born and bred in the city centre of Glasgow
Aged 53 Father of two kids
Own my own walking tour company
I can provide a personal 'meet and greet' service points at hotel, Central Station, Queen Street Railway Station and Buchanan Bus Station.
I know where to go and see in the city.
Can find you good places to eat and sleep.
Football fan, music lover and likes a few beers
Great Knowledge of Scotland
Hooked on Travel . Love to hear everyones travels
Worked for 30 years in yards on the river Clyde




Rough Guides Glasgow and the Clyde

Glasgow, Pollok House, Georgian neo-classical building
Photographer: Joe Cornish
Copyright: dkimages

Rejuvenated, upbeat Glasgow, Scotland's largest city, has not traditionally enjoyed the best of reputations. Set on the banks of the mighty River Clyde, this former industrial giant can still initially seem a grey and depressing place, with the M8 motorway screeching through the centre and dilapidated housing estates on its outskirts. However, the effects of Glasgow's remarkable overhaul, set in motion in the 1980s by the "Glasgow's Miles Better" campaign and crowned by the awarding of the title of European City of Culture in 1990, are still much in evidence, even if the momentum has slowed. Glasgow's image of itself has changed irrevocably and few visitors will be left in any doubt that the city is, in its own idiosyncratic way, a cultured and dynamic place well worth getting to know.
The city has much to offer, including some of the best-financed and most imaginative museums and galleries in Britain - among them the showcase Burrell Collection of art and antiquities - nearly all of which are free. Glasgow's architecture is some of the most striking in the UK, from the restored eighteenth-century warehouses of the Merchant City to the hulking Victorian prosperity of George Square. Most distinctive of all is the work of local luminary Charles Rennie Mackintosh, whose elegantly streamlined Art Nouveau designs appear all over the city, reaching their apotheosis in the stunning School of Art. Recent development of the old shipyards of the Clyde, notably in the space-age shapes of the Glasgow Science Centre, hint at yet another string to the city's bow: combining design with innovation. The metropolis boasts thriving live-music venues, distinctive places to eat and drink, busy theatres, concert halls and an opera house. Above all, the feature that best defines the individualism and peculiar attraction of the city is its people, whether rough-edged comedians on the football terraces or bright young things dressed to the nines in the trendiest of bars.
Despite all the upbeat hype, Glasgow's gentrification has passed by deprived inner-city areas such as the East End, historically the breeding ground for the city's much-lauded socialism, celebrated in the wonderful People's Palace social-history museum. Indeed, even in the more stylish quarters of Glasgow there's a gritty edge that's never far away, reinforcing a peculiar mix of grime and glitz which the city seems to have patented.
Quite apart from its own attractions, Glasgow makes an excellent base from which to explore the Clyde valley and coast, made easily accessible by a reliable train service. Chief among the draws is the remarkable eighteenth-century New Lanark mills and workers' village, a World Heritage Site, while other day-trips might take you towards the scenic Argyll sea lochs, past the old shipbuilding centres on the Clyde estuary.

© 2009 ROUGH GUIDES LTD

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