The Lane was not always the focus of West End cafe society. By the early 1970s, it was a run-down area of small residential and empty commercial properties. However, in 1976, the cost to renew the lease on the cramped property in Ruthven Lane that housed the Ubiquitous Chip restaurant forced the owner to look for new premises. 'The Chip', as it is locally known, moved to its current location in a derelict property that had been the stables for a funeral undertaker. The move was a gamble for the owner, Ronnie Clydesdale, since the Lane was a backwater to the thriving
Byres Rd but in 1977 the
Glasgow Subway closed for a major refurbishment. This forced several small businesses to relocate from
Byres Rd and the then-famous Grosvenor Cafe followed The Chip into Ashton Lane. Other bars and restaurants were opened: the Cul-de-Sac creperie in the former
Barr and Stroud factory and Bar Brel in the old coachhouse that had been used latterly as a landscape gardener's yard but was, in 1910, the chauffeur's house and garage for Dr Marion Gilchrist's 'prim dark green Wolseley landaulette'. Dr Gilchrist (1864–1952) was, in 1894, the first woman to graduate in medicine in Scotland. Today, bars and restaurants occupy most of the premises in Ashton Lane. The Famous Grosvenor Cafe and the now internationally renowned 'Chip' remain a defining feature. Some like Jinty McGuintys Irish Bar have been there a while too, almost 25 years. Ashton Lane continues north as Cresswell Lane, where the variety of bars and restaurants is supplemented by a gallery of small specialist shops. The Lane and its surroundings might then be regarded as Glasgow's equivalent of Dublin's
Temple Bar area or Edinburgh's
Rose Street. While still popular with local residents and students, it is now firmly established on the Glasgow tourist trail. ==Grosvenor cinema==