The Scotsman

Waterfront regenerati­on counts on Artisan plan

- By KIRSTY MCLUCKIE

“We are now in a position to bring these wonderfull­y characterf­ul buildings back to life” CLIVE WILDING ARTISAN’S PROJECT DIRECTOR

Glasgow’s Custom House, overlookin­g the Clyde, is a beautiful building which has suffered a somewhat unglamorou­s recent history.

Vacant since 2007, it fell into disrepair and was placed on the Buildings at Risk Register.

In a turnaround to its fortunes, the Custom House is now to become the centre piece of significan­t waterfront developmen­t site in the city.

The house and the surroundin­g buildings are to be transforme­d into a hotel and leisure quarter, according to plans developed by Artisan Real Estate Investors.

Artisan last month submitted a pre-applicatio­n notice to Glasgow City Council to develop the Custom House as a link between buchanan street with the Clyde waterfront.

The £90 million plan spans a developmen­t area of 2,700sq m and includes the sandstone A-listed house and its former stable block, with two adjacent tenement buildings straddling the corner of Clyde Street and Dixon Street. Artisan purchased the site in August 2017 for a sum above the asking price of £1.75m, and agreed a leasing deal with the Dalata Hotel Group in November to bring Scotland’s first Clayton Hotel to the site.

It will be a four-star developmen­t with 300 bedrooms, a bar, restaurant and conference facilities. The group has hotels across Ireland, England and Wales.

A 150-room aparthotel is planned for the adjacent tenementbu­ildings, with street level bars and restaurant­s.

Artisan has experience of city-centre developmen­t, with the company currently spearheadi­ng the transforma­tion of Edinburgh’ s old town through its New Waverley project.

Project director Clive Wilding said: “This is a hugely significan­t opportunit­y to bring Glasgow’s burgeoning waterfront area back into the vibrant heart of its city centre.

“For too long, the imposing Custom House with its distinctiv­e Greek revival frontage and its neighbouri­ng tenements had become the forgotten segment of the city’s waterfront, mostly vacant for the best part of a decade.

“We are now in a position to bring these wonderfull­y characterf­ul buildings back to life, by introducin­g establishe­d boutique hotel and aparthotel brands.”

The regenerati­on is designed to create a link from the waterfront to the St Enoch Centre transport hub and the shops of Buchanan Street.

Glasgow’s Custom House opened in 1840 on what must have been a bustling quayside.

It was designed by Irish-born customs official and engineer John Taylor, who was also responsibl­e for the Custom House in Dundee. The building had internal modificati­ons in 1873 carried out by Glasgow architect Alexander “Greek” Thomson.

It was most recently occupiedby the procurator- fi sc al’ s office, which vacated it in 2007.

The imposing double height first floor rooms, fronted by classicall­y styled Doric columns, are the standout feature of the building and will be retained as the conference centre. The neighbouri­ng former tenement buildings were home to a department store in the 1960s as well as other small businesses.

The wider area, including Custom House Quay, Custom House Gardens and Carrick Quay form part of a longstandi­ng council-backed scheme to transform the waterfront with mixed use developmen­t including hotels, retailers, luxury flats and a promenade with restaurant­s and bars.

The Custom House project will be delivered by Artisan St Enoch Quarter, a subsidiary of Artisan Real Estate Investors. The architect is Glasgowbas­ed Sheppard Robson.

Following a consultati­on exercise, a detailed planning applicatio­n will be submitted in the next few months with a completion date set, subject to planning, for mid-2020.

 ??  ?? 0 The site on the Clyde is set for transforma­tion.
0 The site on the Clyde is set for transforma­tion.

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