King's Park, Glasgow

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King's Park
  • Scottish Gaelic: Pàirc Rìgh
  • Scots: Keeng's Pairk
King's Park Avenue - geograph.org.uk - 1138174.jpg
Typical housing on King's Park Avenue
King's Park is located in Glasgow council area
King's Park
King's Park
Location within Glasgow
OS grid referenceNS596608
Council area
Lieutenancy area
  • Glasgow
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGLASGOW
Postcode districtG44
Dialling code0141
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
Glasgow
55°49′16″N 4°14′28″W / 55.821°N 4.241°W / 55.821; -4.241Coordinates: 55°49′16″N 4°14′28″W / 55.821°N 4.241°W / 55.821; -4.241

King's Park (Scottish Gaelic: Pàirc an Rìgh, Scots: Keeng's Pairk) is a district in the city of Glasgow, Scotland. It is situated south of the River Clyde and borders the Glasgow areas of Croftfoot, Cathcart, Simshill, Mount Florida and Toryglen and the neighbourhood of Bankhead in the adjoining town of Rutherglen.

History and geography[]

King's Park is a residential area first developed for housing around 1930[1][2] a short time after the territory, historically within the civil parish of Cathcart in Renfrewshire,[3] was brought into the city of Glasgow, and retains much of the same appearance in the 21st century. It includes a mixture of semi-detached houses and bungalows, flats (including cottage flats)[4] and luxury detached villas and is considered an affluent suburb of Glasgow, with median house prices and income well above average. In 2014, it was rated one of the most attractive postcode areas to live in Scotland.[5]

Four-in-a-block houses on King's Park's western periphery, with Hampden Park behind

As of 2005, it had a population of 14,552 residents. The ethnic makeup was approximately 98% White, 0.8% Asian, 0.6% Oriental and 0.6% mixed race.[citation needed] In 2007, residents of the cottage flats in the area were told they would not be entitled to the substantial council tax refunds which had been awarded to householders in almost identical properties in neighbouring Croftfoot, as theirs was considered a more affluent part of the city and consequently the higher payment 'band' applied was correct.[6]

The district was named after the medium-sized park of the same name (68 acres in size) which lies within its boundaries[2][7][8] and is also spotted with further green areas rather than entirely built upon. A scrapbook at the Mitchell Library entitled Old Glasgow Street Songs etc and dated to 1850 contains the song: The Dairy Maids Of Hundred-Acre Hill; this hill can be found as a green space in modern-day King's Park, located at Kingsacre Road offering views towards the tower blocks and tenements of Castlemilk from its south-facing slope. There is another green space on the north-facing side of the same incline at Ardmay Crescent which overlooks Scotland's national football stadium Hampden Park, the Toryglen district and the wider Glasgow urban area.[2] Its name is recalled in a local public house, the 100 Acres, which technically is just outside the local authority boundary in Bankhead.

Public park[]

Aikenhead House within King's Park

The "King's Park" after which the area is named features the landmark Aikenhead House, nowadays converted to private apartments. Designed by the architect David Hamilton it was built in 1806 for the West Indies merchant and prominent Glasgow Tory politician, John Gordon.[2][1][9] The estate, featuring a walled flower garden, stone sundial and centuries-old trees came into the ownership of the MacTaggart & Mickel housebuilders at the time of the district's construction as a residential suburb, and was donated by them for use as a public park in 1930.[10][2][7]

The local 9-hole golf course (a sector of the public park but actually located in Croftfoot which was developed for housing in the same era) was notable for being dug into a hillside 20-35° steep in some places. Donated to the city by the Western Heritable Investment Company which managed the housing and established in 1934,[11] it is now closed and used as an area of common ground, with plans to enhance its woodland aspects by planting more trees in conjunction with the completion of flood prevention work in the area[12][13] (however, local residents noted with concern that a number of older trees of high aesthetic value were felled in the course of this work).[10]

Amenities[]

King's Park Parish Church, Castlemilk Road
Cathcart Old Parish Church, Carmunnock Road

The local eponymous Church of Scotland parish Church (1930)[14] and St Oswald's Episcopal church (1931)[15] are both found in the east of the district on Castlemilk Road (there is also a Kings Park Baptist Church on Castlemilk Road, but this is the Croftfoot continuation of the same road, half a mile to the south).[16] Opposite the churches is a row of convenience stores, cafes and a post office, a former small public library (on the Rutherglen side of the local authority boundary so operated by South Lanarkshire Council) which closed in 2010,[17] and the site of the State Cinema, later a bingo venue, which was a prominent landmark in the area from the 1930s until its demolition in the early 21st century.[18][2][19] Another imposing structure in the area which has survived is the Cathcart Old Parish Church dating from the late 1920s[20][21] (not to be confused with the ruin of its predecessor a short distance to the east at Manse Brae, including a graveyard dating back centuries)[21][22] which stands out in its surroundings, a flat area mostly consisting of bungalows.[23]

Owing to the occasional but significant influxes of patrons whose primary destination is Hampden Park, there are two large public houses in its proximity within King's Park's boundaries, The Montford and The Beechwood, both of which adjoin another cluster of shops, with a children's play park and the Kingswood Bowling Club (founded 1929)[24] also next to the Beechwood. Another local club, Mount Florida, is a short distance further west, although falling membership and great interest from developers in the site made its future extremely doubtful by 2019. As of 2020 the club has closed, the future plans for the land are unknown as of yet.[25][26][27]

Education[]

King's Park Secondary School in nearby Simshill, established in 1962, is the local non-denominational comprehensive.[28] The area is also served by Holyrood Secondary School in Crosshill a short distance to the north - a Roman Catholic school serving the whole of south-east Glasgow, it is one of the largest secondary education institutes in Europe.

Primary schools in the area include King's Park (near the railway station, on the site of Meikle Aikenhead farm), St Fillan's (close to Cathcart Old Church) and St Mirins (Simshill, adjacent to its affiliated Catholic church and its function hall, Christ The King).[29]

Also located in King's Park, 32F Squadron are the first Scottish Squadron of the Air Training Corps who share some facilities with the Territorial Army base on the same site.

Transport[]

The area is served by King's Park railway station on the Cathcart Circle Lines (its Newton branch, two trains per hour), although parts are closer to Croftfoot on the same line Mount Florida which is also on a second branch towards Neilston and the south side circle itself so has five trains an hour. Several local buses pass along Aikenhead Road towards Glasgow city centre, with eastern parts served less frequently via Curtis Avenue.[30][31] It is a ten- to twenty-minute bus or rail journey from Glasgow city centre.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Aikenhead House". The Glasgow Story. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "Kings Park, Glasgow - origins & history". ScotCities. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  3. ^ Map of the Parish of Cathcart in the Historical County of Renfrew, Gazetteer for Scotland
  4. ^ Our Heritage, Mactaggart and Mickel
  5. ^ "UK's 'most desirable' postcodes revealed". BBC News. 25 August 2014.
  6. ^ The £1m Council Tax blunder, Evening Times, 22 November 2007
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b King’s Park History, Glasgow City Council
  8. ^ King's Park, Gazetteer for Scotland
  9. ^ Aikenhead House, Gazetteer for Scotland
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b King's Park residents hit out at Glasgow City Council for felling 20 trees, Glasgow Live, 2 September 2019
  11. ^ King’s Park Golf Club, Glasgow, Golf's Missing Links
  12. ^ Croftfoot Park SuDS Basin, MGSDP
  13. ^ Golf courses in Glasgow could be reforested in bid to make city greener, The Scotsman, 9 September 2019
  14. ^ Welcome, King's Park Church of Scotland, Glasgow
  15. ^ Home, St Oswald's, King's Park
  16. ^ Find Us, Kings Park Baptist Church
  17. ^ Flats plan for former library, Daily Record, 4 January 2012
  18. ^ "State Cinema". The Glasgow Story. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  19. ^ "State / County, Glasgow". The Scottish Cinema Project. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  20. ^ Cathcart Old Parish Church, Scotland's Churches Trust
  21. ^ Jump up to: a b Old Cathcart: Illustrated Guide, ScotCities
  22. ^ Cathcart Old Parish Church (Glasgow School of Art Archives), The Glasgow Story
  23. ^ Glasgow, Carmunnock Road, Cathcart Old Parish Church And Hall, Canmore
  24. ^ Welcome, Kingswood Bowling Club
  25. ^ Fresh hope for community in efforts to save southside bowling club, Glasgow Live, 27 October 2019
  26. ^ Row over Mount Florida Bowling Club rumbles on, Glasgow South and Eastwood Extra, 31 December 2019
  27. ^ Flats planned at Glasgow bowling club site, Scottish Construction Now, 7 January 2020
  28. ^ Our Community: Primary Schools, King's Park Secondary School
  29. ^ Welcome, Parish of Christ The King Glasgow
  30. ^ "Frequency Guide" (PDF). First Glasgow. 1 January 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  31. ^ "Glasgow Network Map" (PDF). First Glasgow. 1 January 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2020.

External links[]

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