The Scotsman

ABC vision will whitewash over cultural heritage

◆ Student housing and food market proposed for former music venue in Glasgow’s Sauchiehal­l Street

- Brian Ferguson www.scotsman.com

There is something special about returning to a cultural venue that has played a big part in your life. Nostalgia has a lot to do with that.

The site might be the location of a first date, the venue you saw your favourite band play in before they made it big, the theatre you return to every Christmas with your family or the museum you always proudly show visitors to your town or city around.

But is there anything to beat the memory of a magical childhood experience?

Trips to the cinema are the source of my earliest memories of cultural venues. The first that really stand-out were to the ABC on Glasgow’s Sauchiehal­l Street, in 1980, when I saw both The Empire Strikes Back and Flash Gordon.

More than 20 years after my first trips there, the ABC was reinvented as a music venue and club. It quickly became a cornerston­e of Glasgow’s cultural and night-life.

I was on my way to one of its shows in a nearby basement venue a couple of weeks ago when I passed what remains of the ABC building, which was devastated by the second Glasgow School of Art fire in the summer of 2018.

A whole host of memories inevitably flooded back. But there was also dismay, anger and bemusement at the obvious decline of Sauchiehal­l Street since then and the failure to bring the ABC venue back to life in any way, shape or form.

Those views have only hardened this week after it emerged that student housing, a food hall and an urban park were proposed for the site. There was no mention of the art deco building's previous uses from the Vita Group, the company behind the scheme.

That was quite an achievemen­t given it has been a home of arts, culture and entertainm­ent since 1875, including a diorama, a circus, an ice skating rink, a cinema, a live music venue and a nightclub. Yet this history has already been whitewashe­d away.

This laissez-faire approach to a site of such important cultural heritage is not only irresponsi­ble, but also irrational given the clear need for action to revive Sauchiehal­l Street’s fortunes.

The city council should have been working with heritage organisati­ons to pull out all the stops to ensure the ABC site was reborn as a cultural venue, rather than ushering in alternativ­e uses.

The ABC scheme appears destined to be one of the worst acts of cultural vandalism in modern times in Glasgow, if it is allowed to go ahead.

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