Glasgow Tourist Attractions and Glasgow Tourist Attraction Reviews

A guide to tourist attractions in Glasgow including photos, listings and reviews.

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Results 1 - 13 of 13 for Tourist Attractions in Glasgow

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Glasgow Science Centre

Science Mall at Glasgow Science Centre: The heart of GSC is the Science Mall. The gleaming titanium crescent overlooking the Clyde has three floors packed with exhibits, cafes and shop. Explore and discover over 300 hands-on exhibits, interactive workshops, live science shows, labs, the amazing Virtual Science Theatre, E-Learning Centre and ScottishPower Space Theatre, one of the finest planetaria in the world.
50 Pacific Quay, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 420 5000 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Glasgow Science Centre

Pollok House

Pollok Estate has been the home of the Maxwell family since the mid-13th century. The current house is an impressive 18th century mansion, filled with wonderful collections of Spanish art, antique furniture, silverware and ceramics, and an impressive library. A visit to Pollok House offers a snapshot of life in a country house, yet only minutes away from the city.
2060 Pollokshaws Road, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 616 6410 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Pollok House

The Lighthouse

The Lighthouse, Scotland's first, dedicated, national centre for architecture and design, was opened by HM Queen Elizabeth in July 1999. The Lighthouse is the renamed £13 million ($20 million) conversion of Charles Rennie Mackintosh's 1895 Glasgow Herald newspaper office. The centre's vision is to develop the links between art, design and architecture, seeing these as interconnected social, educational, economic and cultural issues of concern to everyone.
11 Mitchell Lane, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 221 6362 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

The Lighthouse

Glasgow Cathedral & Glasgow Necropolis

Glasgow Cathedral is built on the site where St Kentigern, or Mungo, the first bishop within the ancient British kingdom of Strathclyde, was thought to have been buried in AD 612. The present cathedral was built during the 13th to 15th centuries and is the only medieval cathedral on the Scottish mainland to have survived the 1560 Reformation virtually complete. .
Castle Street/High Street, Glasgow, More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Glasgow Cathedral & Glasgow Necropolis

Scotland Street School Museum

Scotland Street School Museum presents the history of education in Scotland as a genuine school experience. The museum, designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh between 1903 and 1906, is also an essential destination for Mackintosh enthusiasts and all those interested in the history of design.
225 Scotland Street, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 287 0500 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Scotland Street School Museum

People's Palace and Winter Gardens

The People's Palace is Glasgow's social history museum and a chance to see the story of the people and city of Glasgow from 1750 to the present. You can see paintings, prints and photographs displayed alongside a wealth of historic artefacts, film and computer interactives. On the top floor is the Glasgow history painting series made by artist Ken Currie in 1987.
Glasgow Green, Glasgow, +44 (0) 554 0223 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

People's Palace and Winter Gardens

Provands Lordship

At Provand's Lordship you can step back into Glasgow's past in the only house to survive from the medieval city. Now open to the public, Provand's Lordship has been extensively restored to give a real flavour of life in medieval Glasgow. The house was built in 1471 as part of St Nicholas's Hospital by Andrew Muirhead, Bishop of Glasgow, and you can still see the bishop's coat of arms on the eastern side of the south gable.
3 Castle Street, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 552 8819 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Provands Lordship

Museum Of Transport

The Museum of Transport in the Kelvin Hall is one of the most popular museums of transport in the British Isles, attracting half a million visitors a year. Founded in 1964, it houses many exhibits of national and international importance. The museum uses its collections of vehicles and models to tell the story of transport by land and sea, with a unique Glasgow flavour.
1 Bunhouse Road, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 287 2720 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Museum Of Transport

The Burrell Collection

When Sir William Burrell and his wife, Constance, Lady Burrell, gifted his collection of over 9,000 works of art to Glasgow, the city acquired one of the greatest collections created by one person. William Burrell had been an art collector since his teens, and the collection is made up of a vast array of works of all periods and from all over the world.
2060 Pollokshaws Road, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 353 9108 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

The Burrell Collection

Gallery of Modern Art

GoMA is the second most visited contemporary art gallery outside London, offering a thought-provoking programme of temporary exhibitions and workshops. GoMA displays work by local and international artists as well as addressing contemporary social issues through its major biannual projects. Opened in 1996, the Gallery of Modern Art is housed in an elegant, neo-classical building in the heart of Glasgow city centre.
Royal Exchange Square, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 229 1996 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Gallery of Modern Art

St Mungo Museum Of Religious Life And Art

This unique museum explores the importance of religion in people's lives across the world and across time. The building, which stands on the site of the medieval Bishop's Castle, was opened in April 1993. Displays occupy three floors and are divided into four exhibition areas: the Gallery of Religious Art, the Gallery of Religious Life, the Scottish Gallery and a temporary exhibition space.
2 Castle Street, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 553 2557 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

St Mungo Museum Of Religious Life And Art

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

One of the finest civic collections in Europe is housed within this Glasgow landmark. Here you can explore collections that include everything from fine and decorative arts to archaeology and the natural world. The number of individual items in the natural history department alone is vast.
Argyle Street, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 287 2699 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery

In 1783 William Hunter bequeathed his substantial and varied collections to the University of Glasgow.   Hunter also bequeathed £8,000 for the construction of a suitable museum. Designed by William Stark, the building, classical in style with a dome on top, was erected in the gardens of the College behind the High Street.
University Of Glasgow, Glasgow, +44 (0) 141 330 4221 More Info | Submit Review | Submit Listings

Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery
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