Scotland - My Favorite City

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Wednesday 25 November 2015

Scotland

Glasgow is brimming with adrenaline this summer as the city prepares to host the Commonwealth Games (glasgow2014.com). But while cheers will ring out from Ibrox to Cathkin Braes, there are plenty of other reasons to explore Scotland’s largest and most spirited city. Here's how to match the best of Glasgow to your own travel style.

Glasgow for sports fans

If you’re planning a visit during the Commonwealth Games, which begins on 23 July, there’s still time to snap up tickets for athletics, rugby sevens, hockey and plenty more (glasgow2014.com/tickets). Hampden Park, Glasgow's 52,000-capacity stadium, is a-clatter with construction work in the lead-up to the Games, but behind-the-scenes tours of this world-famous football venue are continuing throughout (hampdenpark.co.uk/visitor-information).
Tours aren’t just for Scotland’s cheerfully fanatical fans, known as the ‘Tartan Army’. Curious visitors from around the globe pose in Hampden Park’s team changing rooms and boot goals in the warm-up area. You can enjoy your own moment of glory as you emerge from the warren-like backstage area into the stadium (you'll have to imagine the roar of the crowd).

Glasgow for culture lovers

Skull feature, the Tron Theatre. Image by Bob Hall / CC BY-SA 2.0
2014 is an exciting year for this northerly nation: September’s referendum could see it vote for independence from the rest of the UK, Edinburgh’s famous festival features more shows than ever, and a grand retrospective of the past 25 years in art is taking place at more than 60 galleries. Visitors this year have to chance to experience art never before displayed in Scotland, and the works of a clutch of Turner Prize winners and nominees, among more than 100 artists featured in Generation (generationartscotland.org).
You can get to the heart of Glasgow’s arts scene at the Tron Theatre (tron.co.uk) in the historic Merchant City area. You’ll have your pick of visual arts, child-friendly theatre, and a bar-restaurant where you can mingle with performers after the shows (don't stare). The Home Nations Festival of British poetry is the one to watch this summer but catching a show here is just part of the pleasure. The theatre is a sight in itself: the steeple dates to a 16th-century rebuild after a fire devastated Glasgow. The building you see today is the reconstruction after a second fire in 1793, started by the Hellfire Club, notorious high-society hedonists who met in secret. Since then it’s housed the Glasgow police, fallen into disrepair, and then risen from the ashes once more as the Tron Theatre.
Looking south from Gilmorehill to Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum. Image by dun_deagh / CC BY-SA 2.0
Looking south from Gilmorehill to Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum. Image by dun_deagh / CC BY-SA 2.0
The city’s architectural treasures also came under threat this year when a fire devastated the library in the Glasgow School of Art. A masterwork of Charles Rennie Mackintosh, celebrated Glasgow-born architect and artist, the building is undergoing repair. In the meantime you can see Mackintosh’s imprint on Glasgow from the Willow Tea Rooms to the airy House for an Art Lover.
For a classic gallery experience, Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum dazzles with sculptures, oil masterpieces and installations on every floor – most impressively Salvador Dali's Christ of Saint John of the Cross. More spiritual sights await at interfaith St Mungo's Museum of Religious Life & Art. The museum’s written explanations seem to target a younger audience but the building, designed in traditional Scottish baronial style and just by the dramatic Glasgow Cathedral, is well worth a visit.
For surroundings every bit as lovely as the artwork, jump on a train to Pollokshaws West (nine minutes from Glasgow Central) for the Burrell Collection. The gallery unites artwork and curios as diverse as ancient Egyptian death masks, medieval stained glass windows, Rodin sculptures and entire suits of armour. This treasure trove is a testament to the tastes (and brutal bargaining skills) of collector Sir William Burrell, and its setting in acres of fresh woodland is as much a reason to visit as the naturally lit galleries.
If this all sounds a bit serious, though, don’t forget that Glasgow does late and loud better than most of the planet, whether you’re rocking out at King Tut’s or the Barrowland or getting down at the Arches or the Sub Club.





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