
Buchananstreet - Hope Street - Renfrew Street
a very long thoroughfare
Sauchiehall Street is Glasgow's most famous thoroughfare, partly because of its Scottish-sounding music-hall name, partly because it is such a popular street for shopping.
The name is derived from "saugh" the Scots word for a willow tree and
"haugh" the word for a meadow (which was later corrupted into "hall").
Originally, it was a winding, narrow lane, with villas standing in gardens of about an
acre or so. It was widened in 1846 and is now a mile-long, broad street, running in
straight lines, from Buchanan Street in the east to Kelvingrove and the Museum and Art
Galleries in the west.
Sauchiehall Street was always noted for its quality shops, with stores such as Pettigrew
and Stephens, Copeland and Lye, Daly's, Hendersons - but Watt Bros is the only one to
survive from these early days. When shops only opened for five and a half days a week,
Sauchiehall Street always closed on Saturday afternoon. More "working class"
customers did their shopping in the slightly more down-market Argyle Street, where the
shops closed on Tuesday afternoons.
Sauchiehall Street always had a good number of tearooms for the benefit of thirsty
shoppers and the most famous was Miss Cranston's "Willow Tea-Rooms" (matching
the name of the street). The premises were designed by the architect Charles Rennie
Mackintosh. While the ground floor is now a jeweller's shop (selling
"Mockintosh" souvenirs) the first-floor "Room de-Luxe" has been
carefully restored and many of its original features remain.
Glasgow was a cinema-mad city at one time and Sauchiehall Street played its part in this,
with the Regal, La Scala and Gaumont cinemas - the "Sound of Music" ran at the
Gaumont for two and a half years. The Locarno Ballroom was also located on Sauchiehall
Street and many a Glasgow romance started on the dance floor there.
Glasgow's first "skyscraper", the Art Deco style Beresford Hotel, was built
further along Sauchiehall Street in 1938 for the Empire Exhibition. It is now a Hall of
Residence for Strathclyde University. Its "modern" architecture was disliked
when it was built and the original mustard-coloured stonework with red fins was rather
unkindly described as "custard and rhubarb architecture".
Beyond Charing Cross, with its red sandstone mansions, Sauchiehall Street widens still
further. Many of gracious houses of an earlier age, have now been converted into offices.

At the end of Sauchiehall street you will find a statue of Donald Dewar. A turn to the righthandside and you follow Buchannanstreet.