The pinnicle of Cooperative House on Morrison Street in Glasgow. Designed by Bruce and Hay and built in the 1890s for the Scottish Cooperative Wholesale Society, its topped by the iconic golden figure of Light and Life.
These missing posters have appeared overnight on the B-Listed Queen Margaret Bridge in the west end of Glasgow after its ornate cast iron Edwardian lamp posts were removed and replaced by modern galvanised steel ones.
I came across this unusual piece of street art in Pollokshields in Glasgow today, which I believe is from the artist Louise McVey. I do love stumbling across things like this while exploring the city.
The newly arrived Govan-Partick Bridge sitting on Yorkhill Quay in Glasgow this evening, waiting to be moves into its final position. It's going to be a stunning addition to the city's skyline when its finished.
Created by Duncan Lunan in the 1970s on the site of a former chemical factory, this is thought to be the first astronomically-aligned stone circle created in over three thousand years. It was moved to a new site in the late 2010s, but it was correctly re-aligned when it was re-built.
Another of A.B. McDonald's masterpieces, this time in the form of the 1890s Renaissance style People's Palace on Glasgow Green.
McDonald is one of a whole slew of talented architects who did as much (if not more) than Thomson and MacKintosh to shape how Glasgow looks today, but who remain poorly known and overlook by many.
You find many strange things abandoned outside of Glasgow pubs on a Sunday morning, but this is the first time I've found a piano! Needless to say, someone had been sick on it.