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Latitude: 55.8655 / 55°51'55"N
Longitude: -4.2621 / 4°15'43"W
OS Eastings: 258533
OS Northings: 665901
OS Grid: NS585659
Mapcode National: GBR 0KK.24
Mapcode Global: WH3P2.HTMT
Plus Code: 9C7QVP8Q+54
Entry Name: Mclellan Galleries, 254-274 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow
Listing Name: 254-290 (Even Nos) Sauchiehall Street, 5, 7 Rose Street, 2, 6 Dalhousie Street and 145, 147, 149 Renfrew Street, Mclellan Galleries
Listing Date: 15 December 1970
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 376751
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB33192
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: 254-274 Sauchiehall Street, Mclellan Galleries
ID on this website: 200376751
Location: Glasgow
County: Glasgow
Town: Glasgow
Electoral Ward: Anderston/City/Yorkhill
Traditional County: Lanarkshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure Art gallery
James Smith 1855, dome and shop fronts by Frank Burnet and
Boston 1904. Redeveloped behind the facade (after fire) 1988.
Rear building by A B Macdonald 1913-14. Polished ashlar with
marble shop front. 3-storey exhibition gallery and department
store. 9 x 31 x 10 bays occupying whole block with cupola
dome on SE corner of Sauchiehall Street and Blythswood Street
and 2-storey, 8-bay addition to Renfrew Street at rear. Main
entrance to galleries vestibule and shop with sculpted,
segmental pedimented doorpiece (1913-14), stepped double
pilasters and sculpted relief in tympanum and niche above
with sculpted supporters and bust on pedestal (bust by
Mossman, reused from original building) surmounted by broken
segmental pediment with relief. 1st floor cill band stopping
at entry to No 2 Dalhousie Street. Mutule cornice. Eaves
string course. Corniced ridge stacks. Slate roof. All windows
sash and case in architraves with plate glass.
ELEVATION TO SAUCHIEHALL STREET: 10-11-10 bays with centre
section breaking forward. 1st floor windows consoled with
segmental pediments in central section and triangular
pediments in centre 4 bays of outer sections. 2nd floor
windows with cills, consoled and corniced. Blocking course to
western section; parapet with piers to central and eastern
section.
Polygonal dome at SE corner (Rose Street/ Sauchiehall Street)
with broken segmental pedimented aedicule windows with
sculpted tympana and alternate arched windows with sculpted
friezes.
ELEVATION TO ROSE STREET: 10 bays and single storey entrance
bay at No 7 with architraved doorpiece, cornice and parapet.
2 floors of consoled and corniced windows pedimented on 1st
floor above Doric pilastered doorway with triglyph frieze at
No 5 Rose Street.
ELEVATION TO DALHOUSIE STREET: 9 bays arranged 5-4.
Channelled masonry in last 4 return bays from S. Single
storey entrance bay at No 6 Dalhousie Street similar to No 7
Rose Street. Channelled projecting solid portico with
roundheaded arch and keystone at No 2 Dalhousie Street. 1st 4
return bays from S breaking forward with 4 consoled and
corniced windows on each floor. Next 5 bays, ground floor
stepped up in 2 bays above entry with 5 consoled and corniced
windows - on cill band in stepped bays and with cills in
outer bays; pediment in 3rd bay from N; 5 margined windows on
1st floor.
ELEVATION TO RENFREW STREET: 2 storeys, 8 bays. Polished
ashlar with rusticated base. 1 storey projecting from main
section with mutule cornice and flat, recessed casement
windows. Architraved entrance at No 147 and No 149 Renfrew
Street. Giant quoined sections with sculpted panels in
projecting outer bays of main section with sculpted reliefs,
dentil cornice, and parapet with swags flanking blind central
section with 3 sculpted panels. 'City of Glasgow' motifs
flanking inscription 'McLellan Galleries'. Eaves frieze,
cornice, parapet.
INTERIOR: cast-iron columns with free Renaissance capitals;
gallery at 2nd floor panelled with Corinthian columned marble
and brass chimneypiece.
GALLERIES: top-lit landing with columnar screens and
pilasters; series of top-lit galleries. Elaborate marbled
detailing.
1st gallery for MacLellan collection 1867, in Corporation Buildings/Galleries, (Institute of Fine Art) subsequently
Magasin des Tuileries, then Trerons (badly damaged by fire
1987).
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