THESE stunning images show a lost piece of Glasgow’s history uncovered during the £120 million Queen Street station facelift.
The massive curved glass roof from the Victorian era - known in the rail industry as a train shed - was constructed in 1842 but, sadly, was covered up by the grey concrete of the Consort House building more than 40 years ago.
READ MORE: Old signage from 1800s hotel discovered in £120m Glasgow Queen Street makeover
During demolition this week, though, the lost treasure surfaced in all its glory, much to the surprise and delight of the public.
Hidden away for more than 40 years, you can now catch a glimpse of #GlasgowQueenStreet's historic train shed - a relic of the #Victorian #railway pic.twitter.com/FjXgQL3NHv
— NetworkRailGQS (@NetworkRailGQS) March 28, 2018
The images were shared online by the official Network Rail Glasgow Queen Street Twitter page on Wednesday.
The post read: “Hidden away for more than 40 years, you can now catch a glimpse of #GlasgowQueenStreet’s historic train shed - a relic of the #Victorian #railway.”
Hundreds have been left in awe, also questioning why it was ever covered up.
I took the same pic the other day. Gutted that it will be covered again in the refurb. pic.twitter.com/YBBTienzrg
— Saima / サイマ (@SamsterSB) March 28, 2018
A Relic?!?! It’s blooming marvellous!!!!!
— Mike Wicks (@C15MNW) March 28, 2018
Why was it ever covered up?
— Oweny Bhoy🏴 (@owenybhoy91) March 28, 2018
Wow! Why was that ever covered up
— Tracey guy (@traceyguy69_guy) March 28, 2018
Wow! Love seeing this!! Hope its fully revealed and not covered up again. Shame it's been hidden under that monstrosity for so long!
— BCM (@BCM61437528) March 28, 2018
@NetworkRailGQS @RailwayHeritage The removal of the brutal impediment that has hidden a shining example of Victorian function meeting high industrial art for so very long. https://t.co/Dj3AimDvKB
— Neil Marshall #FBPE (@ANMarshall) March 29, 2018
It really does add to George Sq! https://t.co/XkOfBRx8z3
— Laura Kelly Dunlop (@laurakaykelly) March 29, 2018
Another user shared an image of the station at a time before it was covered up.
— 29xthefun (@29xthefun) March 28, 2018
Engineers have begun demolishing the redundant Consort House and the Millennium Hotel extension buildings in front of the station to make way for a new-look Queen Street.
The two buildings need to be removed to make way for the new station frontage, concourse and entrances and new longer platforms being delivered.
The train shed will be visible through the new glass concourse
Thankfully, the train shed is a listed structure and will not be demolished. A glass concourse will be constructed in front of it, meaning it will be visible from the outside and to passengers inside the station.
The project, which is due for completion in 2020, will give passengers an expanded concourse with increased capacity and circulation space, improved customer facilities and a contemporary and distinctive building both internally and externally.
Comments & Moderation
Readers’ comments: You are personally liable for the content of any comments you upload to this website, so please act responsibly. We do not pre-moderate or monitor readers’ comments appearing on our websites, but we do post-moderate in response to complaints we receive or otherwise when a potential problem comes to our attention. You can make a complaint by using the ‘report this post’ link . We may then apply our discretion under the user terms to amend or delete comments.
Post moderation is undertaken full-time 9am-6pm on weekdays, and on a part-time basis outwith those hours.
Read the rules hereLast Updated:
Report this comment Cancel