Saturday, 27 March 2010
Red Road flats
The two 31-storey tower blocks and four 31-storey point blocks were designed for Glasgow Corporation in 1962 by Sam Bunton & Associates and at that time were the tallest residential blocks in Europe. They were built with steel frames clad in asbestos panels, the first time such a technique had been used in Glasgow. The asbestos has since been replaced.
As with many other high-rise schemes, poor planning and cost-cutting resulted in a lack of amenities, poor services and a high incidence of vandalism and other social problems. In 1980 two blocks of flats were declared unfit to live. A rescue programme resulted in the conversion of one for student and executive use and another for the YMCA. In recent years some of the Red Road flats have housed Kosovan refugees and are now home to asylum seekers from the Horn of Africa, Asia, the former Soviet Union, Iran and Iraq.
10 Petershill Court (Red Road) : 27 floors, 80m (1969), 303 units
63 Petershill Drive (Red Road) : 31 floors, 89m (1967), 120 units
93 Petershill Drive (Red Road) : 31 floors, 89m (1967), 120 units
33 Petershill Drive (Red Road) : 31 floors, 89m (1967), 120 units
123 Petershill Drive (Red Road) : 31 floors, 89m (1967), 120 units
10 Red Road Court (Red Road) : 31 floors, 89m (1966), 120 units
21 Birnie Court (Red Road) : 31 floors, 89m (1966), 120 units
153 Petershill Drive (Red Road) : 27 floors, 80m (1969), 303 units
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