Glasgow Chemistry Buildings
The Chemistry department has had several different homes over the years:![]() Old College 1747 - 1831 | ![]() Shuttle Street 1831 - 1870 | ![]() Abbot's Kitchen 1870 - 1939 | ![]() Institute of Chemistry / Joseph Black Building 1939 - Present |
1. The Old College
2. Shuttle Street Laboratories
The
laboratory provision in the Old College soon proved inadequate for a
growing department, and in 1831 a building on the corner of Shuttle
Street and College Street was acquired and fitted out at a cost of
£5,000.
This four-storey corner-tenement style block had rented shops on the ground floor. A steep staircase gave access to the three upper floors. The first and second floors consisted of small rooms, presumably staff rooms or private laboratories. Lecture rooms were also present. The largest space was on the top floor, with the windows in the walls bricked up, but with a central glazed section in the roof providing plenty of illumination, additional large ventilators and a maze of gas-piping - this was the main teaching laboratory.
In 1870, Chemistry moved, along with the rest of the University, to the new site on the Gilmorehill Estate, in the west end of the city. The College site was sold to a railway company, the buildings demolished, and the land used for a vast goods yard.
The Shuttle street buildings survived long after the rest of the College had gone - they were used as warehouse and storage space for many years, and as late as 1956 evidence of their earlier use were still visible, in the shape of the ventilators and ageing gas-pipes in the roof-top laboratory. The building has since been demolished and the site sits empty.
This four-storey corner-tenement style block had rented shops on the ground floor. A steep staircase gave access to the three upper floors. The first and second floors consisted of small rooms, presumably staff rooms or private laboratories. Lecture rooms were also present. The largest space was on the top floor, with the windows in the walls bricked up, but with a central glazed section in the roof providing plenty of illumination, additional large ventilators and a maze of gas-piping - this was the main teaching laboratory.
![]() Shuttle St in the 1950s | ![]() Shuttle St in the 1980s | ![]() The roof glazing and ventilators in the rooftop laboratory (1950s) | ![]() Light well (1950s) |
In 1870, Chemistry moved, along with the rest of the University, to the new site on the Gilmorehill Estate, in the west end of the city. The College site was sold to a railway company, the buildings demolished, and the land used for a vast goods yard.
The Shuttle street buildings survived long after the rest of the College had gone - they were used as warehouse and storage space for many years, and as late as 1956 evidence of their earlier use were still visible, in the shape of the ventilators and ageing gas-pipes in the roof-top laboratory. The building has since been demolished and the site sits empty.
3. Abbot's Kitchen, Gilmorehill
![]() The Abbots Kitchen, on the right next to the main Gilbert Scott building | At Gilmorehill, lectures were held in the Easternmost lecture theatre
of the main Gilbert Scott building. A laboratory was constructed
nearby, a high-roofed octagonal building similar to one still standing
in Oxford. Known as the Abbot's Kitchen, this soon proved too small,
and was extended by a series of outbuildings in the early 1900s.
Although these were intended to be temporary, they were still standing
(held up by a series of wooden buttresses!) in the 1930s, when the need
for a modern, dedicated building became increasingly pressing. The James Watt (Engineering) buildings now stand on the site of the Abbot's Kitchen and the other chemistry buildings. |
![]() The original Abotts Kitchen building | ![]() Later laboratory extensions | ![]() Chemistry lecture in Gilbert Scott lecture theatre | ![]() Chemistry Laboratory | ![]() Chemistry Laboratory |
The University Senate approved plans for a dedicated Chemistry building in 1936, at the projected cost of £200,000.
The selected design was drawn up by T Harold Hughes and DSR Waugh. Hughes was Professor of Architecture at Glasgow School of Art at the time, and also designed the Round Reading Room on University Avenue.

Only two of the planned three wings were finished when construction ceased at the outbreak of war in 1939, but even so it was described as "the finest and best-equipped department in the UK at that time."
At the time of construction, it was also the largest purpose-built chemistry establishment in the UK, extending to over 44,000 square feet. The building incorporated several novel features, including a large central store, a 400-seat lecture theatre with projection facilities, and special isolated laboratories for dangerous experiments. A dedicated library held the University library's chemistry collection, and a small suite of private rooms, including bedroom and kitchen, was designed to allow the most dedicated scientists to work on throughout the night. Recognising the quality of the building, a large portion of it was promptly requisitioned 'for research purposes' by the Admiralty during the war.
1948 saw construction finally begin on the third and final wing of the building, but this was not completed until 1954 - a delay caused not least by the discovery of disused mine workings [see below] when the foundations were being sunk. These completion works were done by the architects Alexander Wright and Kay, very much to the original plans of Hughes and Waugh. The completed building was formally inaugurated on 19th March 1954, by Mr James Stuart, the then Secretary of State for Scotland.

After nearly 30 years of heavy use, much of the building was extensively re-furbished in the 1980s to better reflect the research and teaching needs of the time. This work started in 1986, and was not completed until 1993, during which time the building remained open for teaching and research. Renamed the Joseph Black Building in 1997, further refurbishments of the main lecture theatres, and most of the laboratories, took place in 2004-2006, creating a modern, hi-tech department within a landmark historic building.
Then and Now: A selection of photographs of the department taken in 1954, and the same views today can be seen here.
The MineshaftThe selected design was drawn up by T Harold Hughes and DSR Waugh. Hughes was Professor of Architecture at Glasgow School of Art at the time, and also designed the Round Reading Room on University Avenue.

Architects sketch of the original design
The
resulting chemistry building was a striking modernist design - the
first building on campus to be built of brick rather than of stone. The
narrow yellow brick covered a concrete substructure, designed to allow
for future extensions and additional stories to be added at a later
date. The exterior was broken up with large steel-framed windows, and
featured dramatic tall curved glass stairwells to the rear. Twin
re-entrant doorways formed an integral feature of this unusual
butterfly plan building. A special system of foundations were employed
to eliminate vibration from nearby University Avenue.Only two of the planned three wings were finished when construction ceased at the outbreak of war in 1939, but even so it was described as "the finest and best-equipped department in the UK at that time."
![]() Main entrance | ![]() One of the main stairwells | ![]() Teaching lab block | ![]() The future site of A-wing visibale to the right |
At the time of construction, it was also the largest purpose-built chemistry establishment in the UK, extending to over 44,000 square feet. The building incorporated several novel features, including a large central store, a 400-seat lecture theatre with projection facilities, and special isolated laboratories for dangerous experiments. A dedicated library held the University library's chemistry collection, and a small suite of private rooms, including bedroom and kitchen, was designed to allow the most dedicated scientists to work on throughout the night. Recognising the quality of the building, a large portion of it was promptly requisitioned 'for research purposes' by the Admiralty during the war.
![]() Library | ![]() Stores | ![]() Main Lecture Theatre | ![]() Teaching Laboratory | ![]() Research Laboratory |
1948 saw construction finally begin on the third and final wing of the building, but this was not completed until 1954 - a delay caused not least by the discovery of disused mine workings [see below] when the foundations were being sunk. These completion works were done by the architects Alexander Wright and Kay, very much to the original plans of Hughes and Waugh. The completed building was formally inaugurated on 19th March 1954, by Mr James Stuart, the then Secretary of State for Scotland.

Building as completed in 1954
After nearly 30 years of heavy use, much of the building was extensively re-furbished in the 1980s to better reflect the research and teaching needs of the time. This work started in 1986, and was not completed until 1993, during which time the building remained open for teaching and research. Renamed the Joseph Black Building in 1997, further refurbishments of the main lecture theatres, and most of the laboratories, took place in 2004-2006, creating a modern, hi-tech department within a landmark historic building.
Then and Now: A selection of photographs of the department taken in 1954, and the same views today can be seen here.
![]() Entrance | ![]() Cart | ![]() In the mine |
![]() In the mine | ![]() Commemorative Plaque |
An
unusual feature of the exterior of the building facing the Graham Kerr
(Zoology) building is a delicate incised frieze on the origin of
species. Rumour has it that this was done to placate a Professor of Zoology, the view from whose office windows was going to be blocked when the new building was constructed.
His response upon seeing the frieze is sadly unrecorded.
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References
The Shuttle Street Laboratories, Dr A Kent, Glasgow University Gazette, December 1956
The Department of Chemistry, 1892 - 1992, GL Buchanan & SJ Thomson, 1992
An Essay on Evolution: The University of Glasgow's Life Sciences Building, JN Baxter & GB Horspool, 1993
Departmental History Project Materials, 2001. Anne Laird, Bob Crawford, Alan Cooper.
Main Lecture Theatre Refurbishment Gallery, 2003

































