It's Official: M74 is for Builders
The garden is buried under rubble but this memorial plaque remains
at the bottom, tramlines. At the top, a building with its roof removed
The friendly and blameless HAPCA archaeologist showed us what's been revealed on site. Their dig has revealed a cobbled road with tramlines, outlines of tenements going back to the 1850s and numerous recent historical artefacts like toys and a Co-op school milk bottle. He describes its slide into neglect in the neutral terms of rooms-per-family. We see a marble pillar from the "Greek" Thomson tenement on Pollokshaws Road, demolished in the early 1970s. These aren't the people to ask about if the soil they've been digging is contaminated.
One area of the site turns out to be a mound that gave a now-gone street its name of "Rosehill". This excites the archaeologists because when they start in on that, they may uncover one of very few remaining traces of Medaeval Glasgow. They're attempting to piece together ignored parts of Glasgow history, matching maps and memories and collecting oral histories of the area.
And once their time is up (around December), they'll move off, write a report and Transport Scotland will concrete over this part of Glasgow's history.
Meanwhile, the director of the Merchant City Festival gives an Award for Innovation to Glasgow's Planning Dept and a firm of architects for a project called "The Urban Model". Some kind of laser-scanned, millimetre-precise map of the city's buildings that can be "flown" through in a Playstation style. An eternal, shining Now and Future Glasgow, all surface, seen from a lofty height. No people, no air pollution deaths, no worries. Scotland With Style.
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