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March, the Mad Scientist
Written by Lex Lamb   
Tuesday, 30 March 2010 00:00

SSCP 'In Focus' magazineLeaving our monthly progress meeting last night, it was snowing! Roll on that Glasgow summer...

The dust has settled following the first s-m-l Social on Thursday. A hearty congratulations to all who turned up and made it a fine evening with a lot of very stimulating company, and a 'you don't know what you were missing' to those who didn't! Our thanks to the excellent, inventive and very popular caterers - contact us if you wish to get them in the next time you're hosting.

Some interesting work coming through - we've been dabbling in watercolour and paper cut-out for a bit of light relief from html, print layouts and Flash... the first six-colour (process plus metallic and spot) project we've worked on for a while is about to go into print, and the animation saga continues. More specific details once these things are out there and we can put a name to them. Looking forward to seeing the annual SSCP magazine (left) which is on the presses right now.

Somehow, there's still been a bit of time to get out and about. Glasgow Chamber's Business Breakfast with Virgin's Tony Collins was the nicest networking event for a while, and a chance meeting with old chum Heather Sim from Space Unlimited made it even better - good to know that the SU project goes from strength to strength, and continues its fantastic and innovative work. Oh, and there was our annual trip to the the Art Fair too. Part of the Glasgow cultural calendar that we can't really miss, and as pleasant as ever.

 
 

Track of the Week

Building of the Fortnight

Northpark House (formerly BBC Scotland, formerly Queen Margaret College)

JT Rochead 1871

A renaissance palace worthy of its architect's reputation in Glasgow's West End (Rochead having been responsible for some of the most imposing terraces that line the grand boulevard of Great Western Road), Northpark House represents a grand yet well-known sight to anyone familiar with Queen Margaret Drive and has survived a Doctor Who-like quantity of impressive incarnations.

From its original role as private house (to the lavishness of which its galleried-double height entrance hall still testifies) the house progressed to become the home of Queen Margaret College, a groundbreaking venture with the then-novel aim of providing education for women. A Medical Building (by John Keppie) was subsequently added to the building's rear, and the involvement of Charles Rennie Mackintosh in the design of that structure has - predictably - become the primary focus of popular attention on the entire site in latter years.

In the 1920s the house narrowly escaped being demolished to make way for Queen Margaret Drive to access the new Queen Margaret Bridge; a toss-up between this loss or the removal of the Kibble Palace was avoided by plotting the road along a kink between both structures.

The most renowned phase of the building's life was as BBC Scotland's Broadcasting House. A series of developments in the 1930s and 1970s involved the building-over of the remaining gardens, the enclosure of the Medical Building and (in 1970) the closure of access to the nearby - and generally forgotten - bridge spanning the Kelvin. The long occupancy of the BBC, which saw the coming and going of strings of celebs and the notorious seizure of videotape by Strathclyde Police, finally ended in 2007 with a move to the award-winning Pacific Quay building.

Northpark House now stands unused and isolated with the Queen Margaret College Medical Building in the vast, cleared former BBC site. An attempt to present the building's potential as a 'boutique hotel' was set in train just on the cusp of the financial crisis, and the company intending to develop the remaining part of the site is now in administration. The view from Hamilton Drive is dismal, and no positive future for this building or the vast, fenced-off,  yet previously quasi-publicly-owned prime West End site that surrounds it seems likely.