Could Glasgow's skyline be set to change with skyscrapers?

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"Glasgow City Council Approves New Policy to Encourage Skyscraper Development"

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Glasgow City Council has recently approved a new tall buildings policy, aiming to encourage the construction of skyscrapers in designated areas such as Charing Cross and Cowcaddens. This initiative is part of a broader strategy to attract developers to the city by maximizing vertical space for both residential and commercial use, especially in light of dwindling available land for development. Other UK cities, including London and Manchester, have successfully implemented similar strategies, leading to significant skyline changes. Currently, Glasgow's tallest structure, the Science Centre tower, measures 127 meters, which is below the minimum height classification for skyscrapers. The council hopes this new policy will challenge the perception that Glasgow has restrictions on building heights, thereby stimulating developer interest in high-rise projects. However, it is noteworthy that many existing tall buildings in the city are currently unoccupied, and recent proposals for redevelopment, such as the Met Tower, have faced setbacks.

The newly established design guide categorizes tall buildings based on various criteria, including their impact at street level and their relationship to the surrounding skyline. While some architects, like Gerry Hogan from Collective Architecture, view the policy as conservative, they still welcome it as a step forward. The guide emphasizes the importance of mixed-use developments that combine residential space with commercial amenities to create vibrant neighborhoods. Furthermore, it encourages the clustering of high-rise buildings to maintain significant views and preserve the character of historic areas. Cllr Ruairi Kelly of the city council believes that these proposals will significantly contribute to increasing the city center's population by boosting housing availability. However, Glasgow faces challenges in replicating the level of public investment seen in cities like Manchester, necessitating a careful approach to site selection and quality control in tall building projects. Ultimately, the new policy seeks to manage the growth of skyscrapers in a way that enhances the city's architectural landscape while ensuring that new developments are well-integrated into their environments.

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Think of skyscrapers and images come to mind of New York City's skyline, or hundreds of buildings soaring above the streets of Hong Kong. But could Glasgow be poised for a similar boom in tall buildings? The city council formally approved its new tall buildings policy on Thursday, with a design guide establishing what areas could benefit from construction, such as Charing Cross and Cowcaddens. The local authority hope the plans would lure more developers to the city, building upwards and therefore creating more accommodation and also space for businesses - at a time when land for development is becoming limited. It's a strategy other cities in the UK have pursued in recent years, with London and Manchester buildingclusters of skyscrapers at pace. BBC Scotland News understands the hope from some in the city council is that the new policy would shatter misconceptions regarding Glasgow having limits on building heights, and therefore encourage more interest from developers. At the moment the city's tallest building - the tower at the Science Centre by the River Clyde - is under the minimum height for a skyscraper, which is taller than 150m. It sits at 127m. Work began last year on the Ard development in Blythswood Hill, a 36-storey tower of student accommodation. But some of the city's tall buildings already lie vacant, while large blocks of flats - like on Wyndford Road - have beendemolished in recent years. Plans to redevelop the 14-storey Met Tower as a digital tech hub werecancelled last year. The new design guidedoesn't set sights quite so high, defining tall buildings via various factors - including how it's perceived on street level and how it affects the skyline around it. The highest category - metropolitan - is classed as a building three and a half times above the height of "the broader context" surrounding it, meaning somewherelike the Met Tower. Architect Gerry Hogan, who works with the firm Collective Architecture, believes the policy is quite conservative, but welcome nonetheless. "We've been a little reticent to be bold with in our approach to tall buildings, and arguably with architecture in Glasgow generally," he says. "If anything, the guide doesn't go far enough – they go through a very careful analysis of where tall buildings should be located and it doesn't give much encouragement for parts of the city." That belief is centred on the guide's suggestion on placing larger spaces - ideally mixed-use developments with shops or leisure facilities below housing - in certain parts of the city, therefore avoiding clashes with conservation areas like Pollok Park. Russell Baxter, a director with architecture and engineering firm NORR, believes the guide encourages clusters of buildings together. "If youlook at London, there's a lot of clusters there," he says. "It has a very protected skyline, so things like cathedrals and churches are retained, and key views are retained – that's everything in these cities. "So in Glasgow something likeTrinity Tower at Park Circusis a key view – you can't obliterate that view for people. The idea is to cluster them together so you get a number of them in one area - the edge of the motorway is always seen as a place where that can happen." Mr Hogan believes that the quality of the new builds themselves will be key to making them a success, wherever they are situated in the city. "A tall building is the same as any building, it comes down to how good it is," he explains. "Sure, height is a factor but if it's well designed and how it sits in the skyline has been considered then there's no reason it couldn't be put in more sensitive areas if they were well enough designed. "What this seeks to promote, and what I agree with, is having multi-use buildings that bring in people throughout the day and engage people in using both the building and the wider area around it. "You don't want it putting a nearby park in the shade for example." Cllr Ruairi Kelly, the convener for development and land use at Glasgow city council, said the proposals will play a "significant role in our ambition to grow the city centre population" through providing a housing boost. However Manchester's recent boom in tall buildingswas driven by public money, in particular the £300m Greater Manchester Housing Investment Fund. Instead Glasgow will have to box clever, including with locations. "You've not got the ability to do what you could do in Victorian times where you could just place a church or town hall at the end of a street, like a church being right on Ingram Street," says Mr Baxter. "If you go down Buchanan Street and the way the station entrance is sitting there – those were classic Victorian moves for how you masterplan cities and those buildings were key public buildings. "Now what you get are all buildings that are full of students and you have to justify them taking up these key positions." The guidance itself was drawn up through a public consultation and feedback from designers, developers and amenity organisations. Mr Baxter believes the guidance will be helpful, even if the city having its own version ofthe Burj Khalifaremains a pie in the sky thought for now. "At the end of the day, you're not going to stop developers building tall. So what you need to do is control it, and that's what the policy is there to do – control where they are and control the quality of them."

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Source: Bbc News