Etymology The name 'Torryglen' first appeared on maps in the late 18th century and was a small farmhouse in the north of the present day territory.
Geography The area is broadly defined as between the major railway lines to the north, Curtis Avenue to the south and Aikenhead Road to the west. The eastern boundary where Glasgow meets
South Lanarkshire (the Rutherglen neighbourhoods of
Burnhill and Newfield) is difficult to observe from ground level as it involves houses backing onto one another right up to the border in most places. However, as this is a major administrative divide it is clearly marked on maps, with the street names also changing, e.g. Newfield Place becomes Ardnahoe Avenue. Toryglen is residential in character, built mainly south of Prospecthill Road between 1947 and 1962 by the
Scottish Special Housing Association on land which was previously a farm and a golf course. As well as tenements, the area contains some of the city's early experiments in multi-storey housing, built around 1955 at Prospecthill Crescent (very similar in design to a development at Dryburgh Gardens in
Dundee which also still stands).
Demography and locale In the northern portion of the district, Prospecthill Circus was a colourful collection of two 23-storey tower blocks, a 20-storey slab block and numerous deck access maisonettes (all since demolished) constructed by the city authorities between 1963 and 1968. The
Malls Mire burn, which has been almost entirely
culverted, runs north-east under
Hampden Park, the Football Centre and the supermarket, to the west of the Prospecthill Circus area under the railway line and motorway, joins the West/Cityford Burn from Rutherglen which becomes the Polmadie Burn (also known as Jenny's Burn) – once heavily polluted by waste from ''White's Chemicals'' at nearby
Shawfield – and flows into the
River Clyde at
Richmond Park. While it was visible above ground, the Malls Mire formed part of the boundary between the ancient
counties of
Renfrewshire and
Lanarkshire; an informal search by a group of local historians in 2020 failed to uncover any of the old boundary stones denoted on maps from the time. The burn gives its name to an adjacent area of ground between Toryglen and Burnhill (meeting football pitches including the home ground of
Rutherglen Glencairn F.C.), which lay overgrown for some years but was cleaned and landscaped in the early 21st century to be maintained as a 'community woodland', and was granted
Local nature reserve status in 2015.
Sony filming in 2006 for
Bravia televisions A derelict multi-storey block awaiting demolition in Prospecthill Circus was used in 2006 by
SONY to create an
advertisement for their
BRAVIA range of televisions. The commercial involved the blasting of paint onto disused buildings. The main tower block in the advert was demolished in a controlled
explosion on 21 January 2007; the remaining two towers survived for almost a decade before being demolished in stages during late 2016, using a
Long reach excavator.
Housing 'The Circus' underwent comprehensive redevelopment by the
Glasgow Housing Association (GHA) in the early 21st century, culminating in a major development by Cruden Homes, with construction taking place between around 2015 and 2018, leaving the area virtually unrecognisable from the way it looked a few years prior. The 851 tenement flats and 232 tower block apartments in the south of the district (managed by Thistle
Housing Association) were also refurbished externally, including brighter rendering and
energy efficiency, in the 2010s. The association's management of the properties came under scrutiny during the course of the project which suffered various delays and serious concerns over quality and safety, resulting in some of the houses being transferred to
Sanctuary Scotland in 2020 on instruction of the
Scottish Housing Regulator. ==Education==