in Glasgow Green
Nelson's Monument A tall
monument to
Admiral Horatio Nelson was erected in the Green in 1806, the year after his death. A Nelson monument had been erected in
Taynuilt the previous year, privately funded by employees of the Bonawe Iron Foundry, which had made most of the cannonballs for the navy while it was under Nelson's command. But the Nelson monument in Glasgow Green was the first civic monument in Britain commemorating Nelson's military victories. It predated
Nelson's Pillar in
Dublin by two years and
Nelson's Column in London by three decades. Four years after its construction it was struck by lightning, causing the top 6 metres to collapse, but the damage was promptly repaired. Over the course of two centuries since the monument was erected, it accumulated some damage. In 2002, it was repaired and restored to its original condition, and floodlights were installed for nighttime viewing. The cost of the restoration programme was £900,000.
St. Andrew's Suspension Bridge The St. Andrew's Suspension Bridge opened in 1855. It connects the park to the north with
Hutchesontown to the south. It was meant to
"replace [the] busy ferry, [by] conveying workers from Bridgeton & Calton to Hutchesontown". The bridge was repaired in 1871 and 1905. As it neared its 150th birthday, a programme to completely refurbish it was undertaken, partially funded by the
European Union, and executed between 1996 and 1998. It is a
category A listed structure.
Glasgow Humane Society The
Glasgow Humane Society (the oldest practical lifeboat and lifesaving organisation in the world) is based in the Green. The society's Officer's house and its boatyard are located next to the St. Andrew's Suspension Bridge.
Templeton Factory The Templeton Carpet Factory was completed in 1889. After repeated design proposals had been rejected by the city council,
James Templeton & Co employed the architect
William Leiper, who designed a facade inspired by the
Doge's Palace in
Venice. On 1 November 1889, the factory facade collapsed due to insecure fixings; 29 women were killed in adjacent weaving sheds. (The story was carved into a section of stone beneath the base of Templeton Gate, installed during refurbishment work to the area in 2005.) In 1900, a fire in the factory resulted in more deaths. The building was extended in the 1930s. In 1984 it became the Templeton Business Centre. In 2005, the 1930s extension was demolished to make way for 143 new flats as part of a £22 million regeneration project, and
Scottish Enterprise, the center's owners sold it for £6.7 million. fountain in Glasgow Green
Fountains In 1881 a fountain was erected in the park to commemorate
Sir William Collins, a figure in the
temperance movement who had served as Glasgow's
Lord Provost between 1877 and 1880. In 1991, it was moved again to its present position in the Green — facing the Old High Court in the
Saltmarket. It is known as "The McLennan Arch".
Tidal Weir In 1901, the
Glasgow Corporation built a
tidal weir over the River Clyde, in an effort to maintain the river's water level as it runs through the Green. The water is saltwater on the western side of the weir and fresh water on the eastern side, where it runs past the park. This has resulted in an unusual phenomenon: the development of two distinct ecosystems right next to each other. Because of its distinctive design, the weir has been made a
listed building. A short distance downstream from the weir is the
Albert Bridge, which connects the area to the
Gorbals district south of the river.
Fleshers' Haugh The Glasgow Green Football Centre, featuring 18 different football pitches of various sizes and qualities, opened in November 2000 on Fleshers' Haugh, the site where Scottish football club
Rangers played their first ever match against Callander over a hundred years earlier. This area is also the location of the
Glasgow National Hockey Centre, built for the
2014 Commonwealth Games. At the west side of this part of the Green is the
King's Bridge providing a road link to Hutchesontown. There was a pedestrian link to the
Oatlands district on the south side of the river, namely
Polmadie Bridge, but in 2015 this was declared unsafe and dismantled. Further upstream at the south-east edge of the Green is
Rutherglen Bridge. Glasgow Green also has within it part of
National Cycle Route 75, which runs from
Argyll to
Edinburgh, as well as the
Clyde walkway, which runs from the City Centre to
New Lanark. ==See also==