Fascinating. But how badly those dream estates/schemes degenerated in such a short space of time is absolutely shocking. Not just in Glasgow, but the whole of the UK.
@marionboys6406 Жыл бұрын
I was 7 in 1954. At that time my family of 6 moved to Garthamlock. The early days were great, lots of exploring, not to mention the great neighbours. I left in 1968 for Canada and have lived here ever since. I’ve got to say that my generation were the last decent kids, as I believed what followed and what happened to Garthamlock was so sad for a long time. I believe it’s better now.
@scarlettdavidson33943 жыл бұрын
This film is amazing . Made before I was born ,it shows a Glasgow that they hoped to exist in 1980 . The Glasgow I see is not what my children see or what my grandmother once saw . Powerful movie .
@jamesmichael26467 жыл бұрын
Glasgow city council have been very busy since then destroying all the beautiful buildings, and putting shit up in their place.
@Revolver19817 жыл бұрын
James Michael A lot of they buildings in this film are still there. The 60's and 70's was when a lot was lost.
@lesitn88486 жыл бұрын
James Michael u
@78thomo6 жыл бұрын
I agree the city is to commercial like London, more money per square foot in student accommodation compared to social housing and mysterious fires etc and taxi badges dished out like confetti. Glasgow city council is a disgrace a f@@@@@ DISGRACE.
@nikkiajbaillie95146 жыл бұрын
James Michael true
@ZooScott6 жыл бұрын
A perfect example of their destruction was Saint Enoch Hotel .
@routeman6805 жыл бұрын
High rise flats - "a sense of freedom"? No shops for miles and lifts that get vandalized! What madness to destroy so much of the city centre and replace it with high-rise, especially way out of town. I was an Edinburgher most of my life but lived in Glasgow for a few years. I like it a lot. While I agree the housing estates are too far out and lack facilities, there are lots of traditional housing areas in Glasgow that have been left alone by planners, like Kelvin/Hyndland/Broomhill/Jordanhill/Anniesland and much of the south side just south of the Gorbals.
@katy39014 жыл бұрын
Traditional tenements are becoming so gentrified now. Partick's already so expensive and has a massive block of private student flats; Dennistoun, Bridgeton and Govan are going the same way.
@josephberrie95503 жыл бұрын
yes that is the good western part of glasgow where the high ups lived so it was left alone
@rjmacf00152 жыл бұрын
@@josephberrie9550 It didn't need demolition as it wasn't in a state of abject squalor?
@danielward7008 Жыл бұрын
@@rjmacf0015 I'm sure many of the old tenements in other areas could have been renovated and would be attractive places to live today but the rush to go high rise was just too great.
@rjmacf0015 Жыл бұрын
@@danielward7008 Thanks. The message about tenements is about the environment and people who are forced to live in them through poverty. Comments about Hillhead etc are irrelevant. People who lived there were not in any way wealthy in 1935 or now. They simply looked after the area and usually sealed off the front door. This never happened in the vast majority of tenemented property leading to an awful environment with nothing good about it. I physically threw a disgusting elderly man down a set of stairs for using our South side tenement entrance as a toilet. High rise flats failed because of the density of population, total lack of community facilities and the behaviours of a minority of the people who were placed in them. Ask anyone above the age of 70 from East Kilbride what they felt about the decanting of Glasgow to the South East??
@davidconnelly17937 жыл бұрын
That modern architecture was a disaster. It really took the heart and soul out of Glasgow.
@Easternborders6 жыл бұрын
How town planners are educated is beyond my comprehension ,they rip the historical heart out of their cities, they should concentrate their efforts on decent housing for decent people, so David I entirely agree with your sentiments
@lucilovecraft16215 жыл бұрын
Glasgow really is a modern city that changes its skyline etc all the time. Nothing is built to last really and areas will look different again 50 years from now.
@paulfrewzy73745 жыл бұрын
Aww in favour AyeAye Well said dear sir...
@paulbryson70215 жыл бұрын
Chase yer self
@aprilia64995 жыл бұрын
The modern architecture they are 're producing in 2019?
@curt34944 жыл бұрын
Although this film is about Glasgow, the situation has been the same in countless other British cities. Ruined by the town planners of the 1960s-1980s.
@okiwatashi23494 жыл бұрын
Just at the “to be continued “ bit it shows where the Kingston bridge was meant to join up to the M74, 50 years later, it’s still exactly the same
@okiwatashi23494 жыл бұрын
@jemimallah I know I just like the irony of to be continued, and it never was
@Fee_V3 жыл бұрын
Dammit! You beat me to it. Giggled at that myself. 😂
@johngeddes41615 жыл бұрын
interesting film my home ,worked at botanic gardens in orchid houses as an apprentice and in queens park happy memorys
@craigymac53866 жыл бұрын
Glasgow city council has got a lot to answer for , flattening decent buildings for concrete monstrosities and getting rid of the best tram system in Europe.
@taiterobinson7935 жыл бұрын
Craig MacFarlane don’t blame Glasgow City Council as it was only formed in 1996 Blame Strathclyde Reigonal Council and it’s predecessors
@kenandchr4 жыл бұрын
It would be great if the old tram system still existed, in a modern form.
@deadsouls724 жыл бұрын
@@kenandchr No it wouldn't, modern tram systems are hideous. Look at the ones in Edinburgh.
@kenandchr4 жыл бұрын
@@deadsouls72 yes if would, and it would also go some way towards improving the air quality in the city. You obviously prefer to keep the dirty buses!?
@deadsouls724 жыл бұрын
@@kenandchr I did not say anything about air quality, I merely said modern trams look boring and horrible compared to the old trams. Compare the beautiful trams in San Francisco, to those in Edinburgh or Sheffield.
@StephanieG12 жыл бұрын
I remember back in 1979 when a teacher who was struggling to get a suitcase size piano keys video recorder to play turned to us in his frustration and have a spontaneous speech about how we were the 'lucky generation'. We were going to be working Mon-Thu 10:00 -4:00pm. The machines,robots and computers would do all the monotonous,repetitive,dirty and dangerous jobs and because these things never got tired/bored they could work 24/7 and we would reap the benefits by being paid full-time wages/salaries but only working part-time hours. This documentary failed to forsee long-term unemployment,under-working,zero hours contracts and internships. Ladies and gentlemen always be wary of those glorifying the past and those promising a wonderful,shiny future.
@noddyholder79 Жыл бұрын
Well said. Nostalgia for lost futures and a pox on Basil Spence and his ilk
@BlookbugIV Жыл бұрын
I saw similar make-believe promising an automated utopia gifting the workers a life of leisure on an old Pathe style reel from just after WWII. The delusion very much predates that teacher’s ravings.
@matthewalexander87527 ай бұрын
They also did not foresee a crazy looney party who would wreck Scotland and give away tax payers money to Middle East terrorists without its own party ‘s authority or permission !
@garryallison47165 ай бұрын
Defo, look at our beautiful country now!!
@madstanwan6 жыл бұрын
Love the bit at the end... to be continued... .... 47 years later.........
@Jamie-kv9eg4 жыл бұрын
50 years now basically. Christ almighty.
@danbreen69464 жыл бұрын
@@Jamie-kv9eg Celtic winning everything then and winning everything now Hail Hail
@Jamie-kv9eg4 жыл бұрын
@@danbreen6946 Pretty sure rangers won two trebles and a european trophy during the 70s so guess again wee boy.
@FettFotze4 жыл бұрын
@@Jamie-kv9eg Aye but that club is deid noo, Sevco (A new club founded by Charles Greene) are now the new most hated club in Scotland, And i suppose in engerland too as it was the queen of engerland HMRC who sent the Glasgow Rangers into liquidation.
@Jamie-kv9eg4 жыл бұрын
@@FettFotze Dead or Alive still the most Successful club in football🇬🇧 9iar and 4 domestic trebles and yer still behind the famous in trophies. Embarrassing. Rather be a zombie than a pedo. Big jock knew.
@jamesmichael26467 жыл бұрын
All the buildings in tradeston for example were rented dirt cheap to cash & carry owners , who used them for storage, and never bothered to maintain them , until they were beyond repair. Quick buck for the council, but a tragedy for glasgow`s architecture. Stuff like this happened all over the city.
@yellowfolder6 жыл бұрын
racists
@bigbill74scots5 жыл бұрын
@@yellowfolder Fuck off bawsack. Truth is truth.
@mikemcguigan97547 жыл бұрын
nice video of how the town planners comprehensively destroyed the city after the war
@dirkbogarde447 жыл бұрын
They cock up every city and town .
@roddy2body7 жыл бұрын
dirkbogarde44 Who builds a motorway through the centre of city but? Just got to the bit he mentions a ring rd.. Wit happened tae that - is he on about the rd that goes no where next to Kingston bridge? S(one at end of the film lol) Cunts shoulda extended the underground!
@smoothfags207 жыл бұрын
They should have kept the trams as well.
@morry2717 жыл бұрын
Seriously ??
@jimmywalker15687 жыл бұрын
Looked at that on Google Maps what a balls up on the south side next to Wallace Street
@GlasgowGallus7 жыл бұрын
Actually quite an interesting wee film: high hopes, unrealised in the main. Most of the tower blocks gone now. Matter of fact, the motorways are the most familiar. Noticed that the editor was pre-fame Bill Forsyth...
@pduffy4213 жыл бұрын
I turned 1 in the summer of 1971, in Glasgow. Was living in a tenement in Glenapp Street, Pollokshields on the south side.
@JamesArmstrong-bu7ry5 ай бұрын
Same as me big man
@camacassie5 жыл бұрын
I love my city, but hate the disregard the council show to folks it the city. Our history, bloody as it is, is well worth saving. We have awesome historical buildings.
@chrisscott64175 жыл бұрын
Aye the councils are doing it. It's planned, it's not just incompetence. Everywhere this is happening. I'm from Dunfermline, the councils done the town in here too. Destroy small biz, eliminate the middle class. Sabotage, Agenda 21.
@heresjonny..81892 жыл бұрын
Feels like the Glasgow of today is in a race to forget about Glasgow of yesteryear…. It’s disappearing so fast …horrible
@colindevine32335 жыл бұрын
Quality funky tunes :)
@chazmork82654 жыл бұрын
still my city, in my heart and soul, people make Glasgow, always, still here today, tomorrow vibrant and forward thinking beautiful art murals and parks, with a wealth of comedy talent and actors who have taken the world by storm from David McCallum Billy Connolly to Robert Carlisle, Gerard Butler, James McAvoy, great Art Museums, Charles Rennie McKintosh, the Glasgow Girls art movement so much history proud to be born and bred here, Let Glasgow Flourish, love the documentary, 10/10.
@Del-Blanco-Diablo2 жыл бұрын
Gerard Butler isnt glaswegian.
@sandrafinbar Жыл бұрын
@@Del-Blanco-Diablo Yes, he is. Born in Paisley. Close enough.
@SilverSparkles2211 ай бұрын
@@sandrafinbar😂😂 Again, Paisley is NOT in Glasgow. Close enough ffs🤣🤣
@jimbojazza55392 жыл бұрын
The high rises were such a success most of the newbuilds seen here have been demolished. Honestly don't know whether to laugh or cry.
@mt2oo86 жыл бұрын
Shawlands looking no different 40 years ago than today I see
@telephoneguy17755 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Just a shame half of it is gone now.
@abw486 жыл бұрын
I was born in Glesga, Toonheid and Dennistoun, 1948, Alexandra Parade, left in 1966 and when i went back for a visit in the 1980s i was shocked to see that they had pulled down The Enoch Hotel and put up an ugly glass structure, why would they do that?, though much of the centre of the City was very nice, sand blasted the beautiful old buildings down Argyll Street and Buchanan Street area showing that under all that soot and dirt were some of the most beautiful buildings throughout the entire British Empire. I belang tae Glesga nae matter where I roam.
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
St Enoch's subway station now looks like a homogenised steel and glass salute to Berlin nowadays rather than the comforting 80's glow it once had. Govan's station is the same and that is a particular atrocity considering how iconic it once looked.
@britbyname36202 жыл бұрын
How can a film be made in 1971 about a place in 1980 ??!!
@BlookbugIV Жыл бұрын
@@britbyname3620 they must have had the aim that all their plans would be completed by 1980. The cars and fashions and extant buildings say 1970 not 1980. I didn’t realise so much of the M8 was already completed by 1970-71 though. You live and learn.
@perham4410 ай бұрын
I believe many on here are looking at old glasgow through rose tinted spectacles. Born in Possilpark,5 of us living in a one room flat in a tenement. No room,paint peeling off walls ,damp and mouldy. Glasgow City didnt start renovating these until the mid eighties,we were long gone by then,but my Aunt still lived on Killearn Street. Funnily enough she was decanted to our old flat in 251. Loved Possil ,still have family there,but in the 70's both it and Springburn were in dire need of renovation,which didnt arrive until the 80's.
@runawayronnie9 ай бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking. Hindsight is a wonderful thing. What the promotion film doesn't say is much of this 'dream' would be done on the cheap and that's what lead to many future issues. I do like the section where they say the small shops are being replaced by large shopping centres. Those large shopping centres are now full of those small shops.
@Theo-Edward6 жыл бұрын
destroyed, reinvented then destroyed...Thats pretty much the never ending story
@tsb30934 жыл бұрын
Sad to think that the majority of adults in that film will be dead now and those young students at the teacher training college that looked quite hot in their early 70s fashion will be at least in their late 60s...let’s hope they have had a good life.
@sputumtube7 жыл бұрын
Fascinating insight into the optimism of the town planners. Without being able to look into the future it was an excellent idea. With hindsight it's easy to mock now because we know better, but their intentions seemed honourable.
@MrPoupard7 жыл бұрын
the road to hell ....
@alexbutler93436 жыл бұрын
urban freeways don't work in old cities
@jimbrown11432 жыл бұрын
Most of Glasgow's Town planners lived outside the City. They showed contempt for the residents by bulldozing good building's that could have been refurbished and improved by intelligence applied like 20 years later when some Gems were saved. The MORONS by then had destroyed 180000 homes more than WW2. It is still happening example, Springburn sports centre ( red sandstone outstanding ). The Old College Bar flattened after nearly 300 years. What's next for the Neanderthal planners. Please don't let it happen again.
@alzyerpal-TV2 жыл бұрын
The plan was sound at the time, as no doubt were the rat infested closes, outdoor cludgies etc etc before they too needed replacing. Hindsight as ever, is a wonderful thing.
@rjmacf00152 жыл бұрын
@@alzyerpal-TV Astute observation Allen. The country as a whole could do with moving away from people who think they are clever after the fact. As the film points out for those not old enough to remember Glasgow was in major decline with some of the worst urban deprivation in Europe. Re development and relocation was a huge improvement for many families trapped in squalor. Its grandeur remains intact and having been away for 35 years its much better than when I left it thanks to continued improvements. The locals sadly can't see beyond the flippant headlines from those that never left.
@imagination77106 жыл бұрын
I'm from the west midlands in England but I have been fascinated with Glasgow since I passed through it on the way to the highlands on a family holiday when I was a kid (also more recently honeymooning on Skye). I think Glasgow has the best views of any UK city. After driving for hours through border country the place feels isolated, like the city on the edge of the world... The place looks absolutely huge from the motorway, just endless panoramas of barren hills and grey multistoreys. I know life was and maybe still is tough for people there but to be arty about it I've never seen somewhere with a more gloomy and melancholic atmosphere. For people that like this quality of the city I recommend a book by a French photographer called Raymond Depardon (the book is called 'Glasgow') and it is photographs of some of the rougher areas of the city in the 1980's. It's grim to be honest but I really can't stop looking at it.
@nothingisreal86185 жыл бұрын
Nice One! As a citizen of this City I will check that book out. Cheers
@lucilovecraft16215 жыл бұрын
There taking down a lot of the high rises. They never worked.
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
Battleship grey skies, wind and rain is incredibly beautiful at times.
@torquemada32735 жыл бұрын
@@robertmcmillan3638 Aye if ur on the golden brown...whoever designed the Kingston bridge should have been jailed...what an eyesore and basil faulty's efforts in the gorbals...thank God they're gone.
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
@@torquemada3273 Nah! Your problem is you have no sense of artistic romance 😀.
@MmostlyRandom6 жыл бұрын
It's still a shitehole nearly 50 years later the bridge to nowhere in Anderston says it all really about the ineptitude of Glasgow city council (started in the 70's the shopping centre it was meant to connect to was never built and the "bridge" floated in mid air, unfinished for over 40 years, the bridge was finally completed in 2013)
@DZ-hh5dw4 жыл бұрын
@@tartanmctwisted4223 Full of shite, glasgow is a great time. Loads of characters and genuine people. You're alone in this opinion and it leads me to think you're the problem, not Glaswegians. If you're an obnoxious Englishman or a fascist, that might explain some things.
@Madchuck74 жыл бұрын
@@DZ-hh5dw Being incredibly defensive is part of the problem. Though I agree that Glasgow is full of characters, and before all this covid shite it was a funny night out.
@Davidlouis34 жыл бұрын
We are not scum arsehole. Full of dickheads but don’t say scum idiot
@Madchuck74 жыл бұрын
@@Davidlouis3 Full of dickheads but don't say scum. Spot on mate.
@MrPoupard7 жыл бұрын
At 4.00 that brand new B of S building you see under construction at the corner of Ingram St and Queen St was itself demolished in 2012 .
@taiterobinson7935 жыл бұрын
MrPoupard RIP a real modern Piece
@martinmillar84474 жыл бұрын
I noticed it too. Shambles.
@MrPoupard4 жыл бұрын
@@martinmillar8447 To be fair the narrator was accurate: it was indeed a bank for the 80s and 90s (only).
@hazboy117 жыл бұрын
Honestly no need for all the negativity in these comments, this personally made me appreciate my city even more, knowing more about its history and unique culture. It also reminded me that there are still some really beautiful places in this city, like the botanic gardens and kelvingrove park ❤
@taiterobinson7935 жыл бұрын
Listen to me all Do you think the people of mid 19th century Glasgow were happy with their new tenements yes they were at start but then they deteriorated and then post WW1 Early Suburbia starts to unfold which took quite a few thousands out of the city and were those suburbs good of course they were them WW2 rolled about then people decided that the tenements were old and rotten and that Towers Blocks were the future and did those people at start like their new council housing yes they did but then the Asbestos and dampness problems started if they learned from mistakes in the past then they could’ve made Glasgow as mix of old and new I mean who would want to live in a Victorian city in the 21st century Modern Post War ideas were optimising but missed 3 key elements Community, Central Heating, and Asbestos instead of fibre glass insulation
@oddities-whatnot5 жыл бұрын
Bulldozer at 2:35 with no protective roof. Nice. As regards the video, im not Scottish but would rather live in Glasgow than London, although I dont live there either. Love the Scottish accent and contrary to common opinions, I have always found the Scots very friendly.
@anthonycaldeira10307 жыл бұрын
As an American, with Irish/Scottish roots I'm always curious to see all the u.k. And I really enjoyed this video, but it makes me feel old. The 80s don't seem so long ago to me!!
@dcanmore7 жыл бұрын
this was filmed in 1971
@audreydempsey2476 жыл бұрын
I'm IRISH and the EU UN all Zionist media NGOs and borderless charities must be disbanded for Europe to keep it's European cultural heritage identity and have a peaceful future
@mounamohamed51664 жыл бұрын
Glasgow my heart my home my favourite place it's in a special place in my heart
@elamcb43064 жыл бұрын
Same here...
@MrPoupard6 жыл бұрын
A grand plan conceived by Glasgow Corporation's Planning Committee and department in the 1950s and 60s and given birth in the 1970s. A combination of good intentions, stupidity, incompetence and possibly corruption led to wholesale destruction of swathes of a Victorian city and the communities who had lived there for 150 years. An almost identical parallel scheme for destruction and "improvement" was planned for Edinburgh which included thrashing a 6 lane motorway through the Royal Mile but ordinary people there organised and fought tenaciously so that their grand plan for "improvement" never happened. In Glasgow nobody appears to have cared a toss. I hope those who planned and executed this destruction on my city are rotting in hell.
@canturgan6 жыл бұрын
No, they bought villas in Spain and retired with a nest egg from all of the back handers they got from construction/demolition companies, at your expense.
@scotiajinker83925 жыл бұрын
4:13 where is the power station? The only 2 I knew of was cambuslang (it’s definitely not there) & dalmarnock .
@sharknewswires31045 жыл бұрын
pinkston power station in the port dundas area
@scotiajinker83925 жыл бұрын
Thanks , I’m too young to know that one .
@andrewmckenna007 жыл бұрын
Amazing, talking about an amazing new childrens hospital, which is now abandoned
@MrPoupard6 жыл бұрын
And the brand new completed Yorkhill building quite literally fell apart along with with a poisoned water supply the moment it was finished in 1973.. Built by Costain construction John Laing got the contract for the remedial works. Staff and patients and expectant mothers had to work within and around a building site for almost 10 years. No one was held to account, not the contractor, not the Design Team, not the Clerks of Works who signed off completed work on a daily basis. No one. Scandalous.
@jockbawheid50896 жыл бұрын
Was it Michael Jackson's children's hospital?
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
@@MrPoupard I did not know that. Surprisingly coincidental, The new QE University Hospital opened up in place of the old Southern General a few years ago is currently going through a poisonous water supply scandal in 2018/19 that's giving patients infections (including kids).
@MrPoupard5 жыл бұрын
It became clear very quickly after completion that the issues weren't confined to the water supply pipes which mean't water itself was undrinkable. External cladding had to be taken down, and replaced, ditto windows etc etc. The client ended up spending a 7 figure sum on a remedial works which were carried out by John Laing (the original design team for the new building were retained to oversee the repairs). Costain and the client agreed to legal arbitration over a 10 year period ( more costs) but ultimately no individual or organisation was ever held to account. From 1973 onwards it was a functioning specialist hospital: staff, patients and visitors had to endure working in and around a busy functioning building site for 10 years after the building they'd been promised was "completed". In the early 1980s I visited the H of P as a tourist and when my local MP asked me what I did for a living he muttered that Yorkhill should've been the subject of a public enquiry. I know that Willie Hamilton spoke in the House and was outraged by what had taken place. Yorkhill Childrens Hospital was a horror story never told in the annals of public buildings.
@davie89064 жыл бұрын
@@MrPoupard "literally"
@FrazerSmithsChannel6 жыл бұрын
Woah! We've got to lose that trumpet solo at 27:40
@mcdon24016 жыл бұрын
The irony of the closing journey... one of the many "roads to nowhere" that remained exactly that for more than 4 decades... So many dreams and high ideas that came to naught. While some of the changes were definitely necessary, what were brought in as improvements have sadly been proven to be nothing of the sort.
@Anthony-sl6gt5 жыл бұрын
Thats very interesting! I also hope the guy in the white car on the mororway eventually found the exit and isnt still wandering the M8 in 2019
@djrichylaurence89915 жыл бұрын
It was a Triumph 2000 MK1 in case you wondered.
@oddities-whatnot5 жыл бұрын
Should have used a sat nav :D
@davie89064 жыл бұрын
You've never been on the m8 in your life
@theflyingstonemason68675 жыл бұрын
Glasgow in 1980 made in 1971 ?I didn't know time travel was possible. 🙌
@Shannmeister7 жыл бұрын
And not a mention of Craiglang.
@ayrshireman13147 жыл бұрын
And its MP, Mhairi Black.
@Shannmeister7 жыл бұрын
ayrshireman1314 Thought she was MP for Paisley?
@ayrshireman13147 жыл бұрын
I was being sarcastic. Cant stand the lassie, she sounds as if she is the MP for Jack and Victor and their crappy fictional scheme.
@ToastedAlmond986 жыл бұрын
Craiglang - Developing for the Future! Craiglang - Modernity Beckons! Craigland - Tomorrow's Already Here! Craiglang... *SHITEHOLE!*
@Kelly14UK6 жыл бұрын
Fuckin LOL
@mralfred36986 жыл бұрын
Those city overseers, way back when, should have been thrown into the cement foundations for the henious regenereration they imposed upon the city. I trust today's overseers of the green dear place should be made to watch this on a monthly basis and try not repeat the same mistakes as previous decimators....
@jamesmenzies99325 жыл бұрын
I like the idea. It would give a different meaning to the city fathers being ‘immersed in public works’ and being ‘pillars of society’.
@johnmehaffey99534 жыл бұрын
I got a tour of the city chambers and my blood was boiling when I saw the grand old forefathers grinning down at me, their destruction of a beautiful city and destroyed city transport is in my opinion a criminal offence and the ones who caused this obscenity should have their ugly portraits taken down and put into foundations, proper ones not like the ones that cannot carry a bridge across the Clyde, Glasgow is a beautiful city and needs taken care of, I'm not from Scotland but from Ireland but both my wife and I love Glasgow its parks and museums and when this covid is over we'll return for another holiday
@stevenholt4586 жыл бұрын
Not a mobile phone in sight. The good old days.
@09weenic5 жыл бұрын
Steven Holt oh aye inflation sky high
@colinneale41825 жыл бұрын
Not a immigrant in sight either back in those days either 🏴
@charliemclaren49394 жыл бұрын
@@colinneale4182how is that a good thing?
@Flipdrivel4 жыл бұрын
@@colinneale4182 And when you say "immigrant", we all understand what you mean is "black person". As if you could name a time in the history of Glasgow when there were no immigrants.
@127cmore5 жыл бұрын
Small and narrow minded Glasgow, they never learn. Flat roofs in the west of Scotland ?
@taxidude7 жыл бұрын
Beautiful historic areas and buildings destroyed by the M8! A master stroke!
@draxlerchronicles58514 жыл бұрын
You don't really see old women with purple hair anymore these days.
@MMESSINA2 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video! Thanks for sharing, Anna. By the way...I lost your connection of Instagram.
@barbara19047 жыл бұрын
The motor ways cut throw buildings with no remodeling to hide the ugly ends of buildings. Thanks to the Bruce report and the District council they demolished some beautiful buildings.
@g2macs7 жыл бұрын
It was hugely short sited to simply evict a city population to estates miles outside the city. And despite its obvious benefits we must of been the only city ever to cut its self in half with a motorway. (I have to admit though it is an asset that I use frequently)
@nickwillobey2205 Жыл бұрын
My friend lived in Maryhill, I loved Glasgow... great place!
@boyblunder8889 Жыл бұрын
Glasgow 1980 , made in 1971 ? Cool , a genuine time travel video 👍
@moniquedewyk63417 жыл бұрын
These photos and those on other sites remind me sooooo much of Hamilton, Ontario. The old and new photos too could be taken out and transplanted here and no one would notice.
@anonUK5 жыл бұрын
Was Hamilton Ontario modelled on Hamilton near Glasgow?
@erdishzane4724 жыл бұрын
Been there. My partner studied at McMaster university, she’s from richmond hill
@fastteddyb4 жыл бұрын
The soundtrack is the best part :)
@oddities-whatnot4 жыл бұрын
Maybe off topic but it still amazes me how many blocks of high rise flats there are around Glasgow.
@nickiaaaaa5 жыл бұрын
lol 'the age of computers and automation' also the age of obesity and redundancies
@barbara19047 жыл бұрын
When you look at Glasgow as it was, it was quite beautiful. It was like a mini Paris or London. But instead of refurbishing, they flattened it in a bitty way. Instead of doing it in phases, they did it all over the city. So when they ran out of money, the whole city was left higalty pigalty. This would never have happened in London. Sad.
@bigbearfuzzums70276 жыл бұрын
London's allready destroyed!
@lucilovecraft16215 жыл бұрын
London’s even worse than Glasgow.
@jamesmenzies99325 жыл бұрын
Carol Foreman's book, Lost Glasgow, describes the actions of the philistines.
@donaldclements63584 жыл бұрын
The narration sounds as if Glasgow is going to become an urban utopian metropolis, how wrong they were.
@Weegie26 жыл бұрын
Glasgow City Council spent money having the pish ripped out of them on film.
@johayes75292 жыл бұрын
WOW I thought Thatcher closed down the UK in the 80s. And didn't the first heroin epidemic start in those highrise appartments? This is just brilliant andvery funny.
@iandorans27635 жыл бұрын
They’d be asweel fillin in the potholes in the roads wae coco pops
@Cairo98_4 жыл бұрын
😂
@nogingerfool16 жыл бұрын
who the hell bought a melon in 1971 , no way did that happen
@Caldyz6 жыл бұрын
I grew up around the fruit market ,and I was thinking I never saw a melon till 1990.😂
@audibleeye5 жыл бұрын
@@Caldyz I remember melons in the 60's, they where just seasonal. Those thick green husks were distinctive of the variety available.
@tsb30934 жыл бұрын
Yeh that bit was filmed in Spain🤣
@jameswest46924 жыл бұрын
No way was there fruit in Scotland pre 1990
@lucilovecraft16215 жыл бұрын
The shit they built on the Clyde after millennium has already aged terribly✌️
@CalvinsWorldNews3 жыл бұрын
Thought exactly the same last time I visited (I'm in the US currently). I vaguely hope that in another 20 years, so much millennium stuff will have been torn down that what remains will have a curiosity value. Same as how brutalist stuff has had a comeback in so much as not much is left and what remains is now historically important.
@bikeboy66746 жыл бұрын
The horrendous cleaving in two of glasgow by the M8 is exemplified perfectly here with those images of a once beautiful Charing Cross being bulldozed out of existence. We badly need to reverse this and restore this whole area back to a more humane design where people and nature are re-prioritised into it's construction, not motorways and polluting traffic.
@greenlichtie4 жыл бұрын
Jeez he made it sound like progress........I wonder if he'd been as enthusiastic if he'd done a remake in the 80's
@RobBob5557 жыл бұрын
yes, we were so clever with automation, we got rid of all the fucking jobs !
@paulmcateer66966 жыл бұрын
And we now have the benefit of seeing the whole movie. Turned out to be a horror.
@nyannya49907 жыл бұрын
The buildings in pollock sheilds and ibrox are still here today
@twiglet22144 жыл бұрын
Been there a few years ago - we enjoyed seeing the Burrell Collection and it's beautiful home. I believe there are over 400 words for snow in Scottish,it must make the weather forecast a bit long winded ? My version for precipitation is Rudolf - it's going to reindeer. Unfortunately the only word (un-snow related ) i know is numpty which has a certain cache to it. Any ideas on it's origin and when it first entered the vernacular ? A work colleague from Aberdeen used it frequently and now that i'm retired i rarely hear it so it would be nice to hear Andrew Cotter describing a rugby player that had just given away a soft penalty as " a bit of a numpty " ! Anything's possible.....
@josephberrie95502 жыл бұрын
sorry but the 400 words for snow is not scottish its innuit eskimo
@twiglet22142 жыл бұрын
@@josephberrie9550 Perhaps they have but this says there are 421 words for snow in Scottish language so put that in ya bagpipe and smoke it ! Scotland has more than 400 words and expressions for snow, according to a project to compile a Scots thesaurus. Academics have officially logged 421 terms - including "snaw" (snow), "sneesl" (to begin to rain or snow) and "skelf" (a large snowflake).
@Anonymous-cf1yh4 ай бұрын
Brilliant video
@Flipdrivel4 жыл бұрын
I can't watch any more, it's too depressing.
@ionabarker4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I got to 7 mins in and had to stop.
@fauntleeeeroy4 жыл бұрын
I know, so sad that futurist, globalists technocrats run the world now. And can create fake pandemics, plandemics, scamdemics, global hoax
@leahwallace67705 жыл бұрын
PLEASE, can you do one on Paisley.😜
@laffin045 жыл бұрын
your 59yrs too late
@chrisscott64175 жыл бұрын
@@laffin04 isn't it 49 . Lol
@davidjohnston75123 жыл бұрын
Wow.Glasgow is the home town of my father.He was born in Glasgow and emigrated to Australia as a child with his parents (my grandparents)after WW2 .I know Scotland has some beautiful places but fuck me,Glasgow looked like a ghetto in 1971.
@soulstorm_music7 жыл бұрын
...and OH WHAT A MESS THEY MADE. A mess we're still tidying up.
@cmst697 жыл бұрын
As a Glaswegian i can honestly say, that didna work, did it? But good wee blast fa the past non the less
@weeian317 жыл бұрын
rob b ssh
@1712hamish17127 жыл бұрын
It doesn't make Rob B wrong though
@peppapig61787 жыл бұрын
rob b why you so fuckin pissed of bout it ?
@rockinbillyboy4 жыл бұрын
@17:45 ....how the hell did they think the buildings were built?...and how homes were heated?.....the year is now 2021 and i STILL go to work and do "oil, sweat and backbreaking labour"....go and ask the miners of 1980, ask the builders and labourers if backbreaking work has gone!!
@abw485 жыл бұрын
I was born in the tenements,Toonheid, and the City Council would have been better off refurbishing those buildings rather than destroying them and replacing them with wee small boxes for people to live in as the tenements were well made, solid, to keep the warmth within and the cold out. You can take the boy out of the slums but you need to take the slums out of the boy... Thats why most of those "New" Flats ended up being bigger shiteholes than the tenements they moved the people out of, places like East Kilbride and Drumchapel, Cumbernauld and I have family in all three of those dumps. I ran away in 1966, never lived thee again, left the UK for good in 1970 and never lived there again.
@AndrewKerr57 жыл бұрын
Shows where we are still clearing up. Some items made me chuckle, how optimistic the narrator was all this bull crap would actually happen... ...Still waiting. Some of the music feels like its out of a bad porn movie.
@williamf45445 жыл бұрын
Yes i remember thst porn cinema you went to - across the road from where Primark and Lidls is now - i thought recognised your face from somewhere Jimmy
@ajs415 жыл бұрын
In reality 1980 was probably one of the worst times ever for Glasgow.
@anonUK5 жыл бұрын
as well as Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds, Nottingham...
@MartinFarrell19726 ай бұрын
Wow I can't wait for 1980!
@GG-im1cb7 жыл бұрын
Despite the numerous recent re-developments, to remove much of what we see here being conceived and built, we still have much of Glasgow as dysfunctional former tenemented wasteland. I have watched many of these visionary post war films for cities and new towns across Scotland and many of them were clearly flawed from inception, however much of the subsequent failure was due to compromise and a lack of money to fully implement the infrastructure required to support the new areas. But despite all of the previous development disasters we have learned absolutely nothing, we have replaced or reclad the damp post war concrete eyesores with aluminium eyesores on largely the same footprint, many of which would appear to be clad with flammable materials and generally of poor quality and limited lifespan. 🙈
@barbara19047 жыл бұрын
Greig G Good points but most won't read it cause its too long.
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
Every City in the UK is in danger of ending up looking the same nowadays. Are some Illuminati department trying to kill off tourism? Their will soon be no need to travel to other Cities in the UK if they all end up looking the same.
@billy2wheels6 жыл бұрын
What a waste knocking down most of the buildings should have redesigned tenements kept old GLASGOW thought through new schemes to
@Kalarandir7 жыл бұрын
A plan for Glasgow that was so successful that by 1980 Glaswegians were leaving the city in their 10s of thousands for a better life away from places like Pollock and Easterhouse that were the great idea of a better Glasgow. It was however, interesting to see the Glasgow that I grew up with in the late 60s and early 70s and where I would visit my father working on those huge building sites.
@Del-Blanco-Diablo2 жыл бұрын
Pollok👍
@billytrack Жыл бұрын
They left mainly because their flats were demolished and they were decanted to 'deserts with windaes', not out of choice
@georgerichardson77285 жыл бұрын
I was in Argyle Street today, would break your heart to see the mess our city is in now, an absolute midden, the council have run it into the ground, no pride left in the place, embarrassing shithole.
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
Wait until you see Sauchiehall street 😂.
@georgerichardson77285 жыл бұрын
@@robertmcmillan3638 Total shitehole too, aye, most of it burned to fuck, the city council have ruined the city, disgusting
@jamesdiver21835 жыл бұрын
It all seemed so prosperous, what went wrong, the introduction of hard drugs perhaps.
@ajs415 жыл бұрын
There were an unusually large number of low-skilled workers in Glasgow, so when all the factories closed it was particularly hard hit.
@nickiaaaaa6 жыл бұрын
I just feel so sad when I watch this, it was all done with good intentions, to improve things, but it all just seemed to go down the shitter. A lot of things now knocked down or not even finished!!!! Like the ski jump ramps at the very end of the vid. They tried to make a wee 'utopia' but it just never came to fruition unfortunately. Hindsight is great though... :(
@robertmcmillan36385 жыл бұрын
@supernumery Glasgow is still going down the shitter. Now Glasgow has death defying potholes as well. Probably no money to fix them as ever increasing amounts of money are getting used for integration projects and further Scottish independence referendums.
@derekoreilly65264 жыл бұрын
I lovely Triumph 2000 Mark 1
@pahoboye7 жыл бұрын
it's only 9 years away and they make out like it's 50 years in the future...they have a tight agenda.
@danizanzibar43445 жыл бұрын
i look forward to 1980
@richardekers302510 ай бұрын
I love the opening sequence showing empty roads! Presumably we were all supposed to be travelling around using jet packs by then!
@pointblank64 жыл бұрын
I've only lived in Glasgow 3 years now but whoever designed the motorways needs a slap. Heading north on the M77 and want to head west on the M8? Nope that's not happening without heading East first then coming back on yourself. West bound M74 - M8 west? Nope. Right lane slip roads? Yep.
@davecroft82204 жыл бұрын
I
@ow41486 жыл бұрын
i first work in glasgow in late 70s. i last worked in glasgow 2012. a massive changed during that time for the good of the city.i have found the good people of glsgow still the same.welcoming,,,,,good humour....always helpful...i love that,,as a german i have always feel people respected me in glasgow...My team in glasgow THE CELTS!!! 1967!! THE BHOYS!!!FUCK THE HUNS!!! Brilleant memoriesSEAN SOUTH OF GARRY OWEN!!! 9in a row...Im fucken pissed
@paulmcbride81326 жыл бұрын
..cheers mate your a.9 in a row spunkbucket..
@erdishzane4724 жыл бұрын
@@paulmcbride8132 you’re 🙄
@MrMarcy768 ай бұрын
1980 was the start of the gang problem, with the growth of large high rises.
@sixteenthlevel34144 жыл бұрын
who knows the tune at 12:00?
@glasgowconstructiongrouplt5736 жыл бұрын
Love these old videos ;)
@treasurehuntingscotlandmud93407 жыл бұрын
most of these old buildings are now gone
@NeverRubARhubarb4 жыл бұрын
Who made this film? Sounds like a load of corporate propaganda. The optimistic bollocks about the charms of high-rise living is particularly galling.
@wboyle9721 Жыл бұрын
Glasgow is still recovering to this day with new generation projects because of mistakes in housing glasgow is getting better but there are still pockets of poverty throughout the city let's hope they plan better housing and communities for future glaswegians
@rodchamp75106 жыл бұрын
Im why does it start with 70s footage ?
@johnnycassettes12286 жыл бұрын
The film was made in 1971. The title is "Glasgow 1980" because it's about Glasgow's future.