FROM a city once at the heart of the industrial revolution to the crippling effects of the closure of the shipyards, Glasgow is a city that has endured difficult times more than most.
However, true to the city’s very own motto, Let Glasgow Flourish, it has reinvented itself on many occasions including a ‘renaissance period’ starting in the 1980s with the Glasgow Garden Festival acting as one of the springboards.
The 1990s saw Glasgow become the City of Culture and other accolades followed such as the City of Architecture and Design in 1999.
Now as Scotland’s largest city negotiates its way out of the pandemic and looks to continue its recovery, City Urbanist Professor Brian Evans believes Glasgow is entering a fourth era.
“It’s helpful to reflect on the history of the city’s development, which in some respects is more extreme than many other UK cities,” said Professor Evans, whose role with…