Red Road Flats

Red Road Flats
The Eight Red Road Towerblocks in March 2009. All demolished by 2015.
Map
General information
StatusDemolished (between June 2012 – October 2015)
TypeResidential
Architectural styleBrutalist / Modernist
LocationBalornock, Glasgow, Scotland
AddressTower 1: 10 Red Road Court
Tower 2: 33 Petershill Drive
Tower 3: 63 Petershill Drive
Tower 4: 93 Petershill Drive
Tower 5: 123 Petershill Drive
Tower 6: 10–30 Petershill Court
Tower 7: 153–213 Petershill Drive
Tower 8: 21 Birnie Court
Coordinates55°52′48.54″N 4°12′29.57″W / 55.8801500°N 4.2082139°W / 55.8801500; -4.2082139 (Red Road Flats)
Construction started1964
Completed1966
Opening1968
DemolishedJune 2012 – October 2015
Cost£6 million (estimated)
OwnerGlasgow Housing Association
Height
RoofPoint Blocks=89.0 metres (292 ft)
Slab Blocks=79.0 metres (259 ft)
Top floor31
Technical details
Structural systemSteel frame
Floor countPoint Blocks = 31
Slab Blocks = 28
Lifts/elevatorsPoint Blocks = 2
Slab Blocks = 6
Design and construction
Architect(s)Sam Bunton & Associates
DeveloperGlasgow Corporation
Structural engineerW A Fairhurst & Partners

The Red Road Flats were a mid-twentieth-century high-rise housing complex located between the districts of Balornock and Barmulloch in the northeast of the city of Glasgow, Scotland. The estate originally consisted of eight multi-storey blocks of steel frame construction. All were demolished by 2015. Two were "slabs", much wider in cross-section than they are deep. Six were "points", more of a traditional tower block shape. The slabs had 28 floors (26 occupiable and 2 mechanical), the point blocks 31 (30 occupiable and 1 mechanical), and taken together, they were designed for a population of 4,700 people. The point blocks were among the tallest buildings in Glasgow at 89 metres (292 ft), second in overall height behind the former Bluevale and Whitevale Towers in Camlachie. The 30th floor of the point blocks were the highest inhabitable floor level of any building in Glasgow.

Views from the upper floors drew the eye along the Campsie Fells to Ben Lomond and the Arrochar Alps, then west past the Erskine Bridge and out to Goat Fell on the Isle of Arran continuing south over Glasgow and East towards Edinburgh. On a clear day, the buildings were visible on the Glasgow skyline from up to 10 miles (16 kilometres) away. The 31st floor of the point blocks and the corresponding 28th floor of the slabs were reserved as a communal drying area.

Among the best-known of Glasgow's highrise housing developments of the 1960s, the buildings were formally condemned in July 2008 after a long period of decline, with their phased demolition taking place in three stages between 2010 and 2015.