The Scotsman

Inside Transport

Doors Open Days provides a gateway to hidden worlds, writes Alastair Dalton

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Going behind the scenes is one of the great privileges of being a journalist. I’ve been lucky enough to be shown round many extraordin­ary places that are off limits to the public, from airport runways to the top of the Forth Bridge.

However, once a year, hundreds of normally closed buildings across Scotland are opened for people to have a peek inside.

Launched nearly 30 years ago as part of Glasgow’s year as European City of Culture in 1990, Doors Open Days (DOD) now describes itself as Scotland’s biggest free festival, generating 200,000 annual visits.

DOD now provides not just access to 800 historic and architectu­rally notable buildings but a wide-ranging programme of guided tours and lectures, also all free.

Over the years, I’ve looked inside many buildings in Edinburgh and Glasgow during DOD, joined fascinatin­g tours of the Clyde and its bridges by bike and on foot. I’ve also been to lectures about Glasgow’s pioneering undergroun­d railways, visited former shipyards and the city’s oldest railway station building – the 170-year-old Pollokshaw­s West.

Of course, there are myriad other sites on offer by DOD over several weekends next month, a different one for each part of the country.

They include everything from private swimming baths and sheriff courts to breweries and an animal hospital.

However, for those interested in how we get about, there are some 20 buildings and events connected with transport in Glasgow alone, and at least seven in Edinburgh, with the capital’s DOD events programme to follow.

Elsewhere, you can visit a newly installed train turntable at a railway heritage centre in Aberdeen, HMS Unicorn – Scotland’s oldest ship – in Dundee, and the constructi­on site of a £35 million road in Perth, the new A9/A85 link.

Edinburghe­rs will have their first chance to enter the Edinburgh Trams nerve centre, at its depot in Gogar.

Also on show will be Lothian Buses’ headquarte­rs off Leith Walk, which are nearly a century old, and the Northern Lighthouse Board’s offices in George Street, which are approachin­g their 200th anniversar­y.

There’s also a shed in Leith where the last shipbuildi­ng at the historic port ended in 1984 after 500 years, and a bunker in Barnton from where RAF fighter attacks were co-ordinated during the Second World War.

In Glasgow, I’m looking forward to hearing about the city’s roads from prehistori­c times to the M8, and prospects for walking improvemen­ts, while you could also be shown round the radical Avenues project to widen pavement and cycle lanes on several major city centre streets and also create a new “Underline” route beneath the motorway.

Also available will be tours of the original Queen Mary – the 1947 Clyde cruiser – which is being restored at Pacific Quay, a guided trip round Glasgow Airport, and trips along the Forth & Clyde Canal.

A novel tour of Glasgow streets will involve parkour – jumping and climbing over obstacles, while the less energetic can journey between DOD buildings on a fleet of historic buses provided by the Glasgow Vintage Vehicle Trust.

But you’ll have to move fast, with many of the Glasgow events that require booking already sold out, although you can join waiting lists.

I’m expecting to see and learn a lot – for nothing. The only problem is deciding what to choose as there is so much available.

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