Merkland Street subway station

Merkland Street station was one of the original 15 stations on the Glasgow Subway. It is the only ghost station on the system (i.e. a station that trains still pass through but is disused by passengers). The station opened in 1896. It was located 25 metres (27 yd) to the south-west of its replacement, Partick station and about 300 metres (330 yd) to the south of Partickhill railway station. It closed permanently in 1977 when the rest of the network was closed for modernisation. The modernisation had been announced in 1974 by the subway's then operators, the Greater Glasgow Passenger Transport Executive (GGPTE). Although converted to electric traction in 1935, the system's infrastructure and rolling stock was virtually unchanged from its opening in 1896, and improvement to the subway was seen by the GGPTE as an essential part of plans to eliminate transport bottlenecks in the city. As part of the process, which began in 1977, all 15 stations were to be rebuilt. However it was planned to link the subway to the national rail network's newly reopened Argyle Line at Partick via an interchange station. This meant permanently closing Merkland Street and opening a new station a short distance away. Thus, when the network reopened in 1980, it was replaced by a new station nearby named Partick, offering direct transfers to the rail station of the same name. There is evidence of Merkland Street station's existence due to a long straight and humped stretch on the underground with large diameter tunnels, although the platforms and station buildings no longer remain. On 18 September 1940, during World War II, a German bomb, which dropped during a night raid on Glasgow and may have been intended for nearby naval facilities, landed on a bowling green to the south of the station. The explosion this caused resulted in damage to both tunnels and closure of this part of the system until repairs were completed in January 1941. Merkland Street is one of the stations mentioned in Francie and Josie's song Glasgow Underground.

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176 m

Partick

Partick (Pàrtaig en gaélique écossais (gd) ; Pairtick en scots (sco)) est un district de Glasgow. Il est situé sur les rives nord de la Clyde juste en face du district de Govan. Il se trouve entre les districts de Whiteinch (à l'ouest), de Hillhead (à l'est) et de Partickhill (en) (au nord). Il constituait un burgh de 1852 à 1912, date à laquelle il a été incorporé dans Glasgow.
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263 m

Hamilton Crescent

Le Hamilton Crescent est un stade de cricket, situé dans le quartier de Partick, à Glasgow, en Écosse. L'équipe du West of Scotland Cricket Club (en) y joue ses matches à domicile.
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571 m

Kelvin (rivière)

La Kelvin est une rivière d'Écosse et un affluent de la Clyde.
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593 m

Riverside Museum

Le Riverside Museum, musée écossais des transports, a été officiellement inauguré le 21 juin 2011 à Glasgow. Le musée, conçu par Zaha Hadid, a reçu le Prix du musée européen de l'année 2013 par le Forum Européen du Musée.
960 m

Govan (Glasgow)

Govan (scots : Gouan, gaélique écossais : Baile a' Ghobhainn) est un ancien burgh, aujourd'hui un district de Glasgow en Écosse, intégré à la ville depuis 1912. Un de ses anciens quartiers, Linthouse, en avait été détaché onze ans auparavant pour devenir un district de Glasgow dès 1901. Il est situé à 4 kilomètres à l'ouest du centre-ville, au sud de la Clyde. De 1834 à 1968, le quartier a hébergé l'un des plus grands chantiers navals du pays, la Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company.