I lived in Glasgow for 5 years and the most beautiful thing about this city is the people. They make you feel at home and so welcome. Glasgow has a lot of green spaces, parks and a beautiful botanic Garden. Free museums, and a exacting nightlife. My favorite area is West end ( I lived in Partick). By the river is amazing. I miss this city
Friendly vibe lol what crack have you been smoking lol, walk down Union St anytime of the day and theres about 20 junkies fighting and trying to rob people
As for me, you cannot simply show Glasgow without showing West End. That's the best part of it. Though, the City Centre is also quite nice, but nothing like Kelvinside
@@johnwilliams5838 it has some nice living areas, though, the West End contains almost all the "post card views" of Glasgow whilst the south side has just the Burell Collection though have never seen that representing Glasgow. South side is a wee bit inconvenient to get by a public transport nor on foot when the West End has subway, two lines of Scotrail built through and it has a continuous walking travel route from the city centre, even the m8 is carefully hidden to not to annoy that much. When the Souther bank of Clyde struggles from brownfields, greenfields first and only revives after 5-10 minute drive near the Scottish Ballet.
Great shopping restaurant's hotel's loads free to c and do good public transport bit run down in certain areas but that's like all big cities...people are lovely 😍
@@naweedzazai7258 Merhaba, Glasgow-da yaşamanın ne kadar güvenli olduğunu anlata bilirmisiniz? Glasgow üniversitesinden davet mektupu aldim, ancak arastirma yapdikca tehlikeli şehir oldugunu öğreniyorum. Onceden teshekkur ederim
The vast majority of those people won't know where they are, or what's happening around them. I work in the centre, and calling the people stupid, is being very, very kind.
Nice.Hope way all the new face change, they don!t takeaway the character of Glasgow, way all glass and mirrors of their corporate change,profit flash,for the few, as Mary, Willie, wee shuggie, john ,annie and abdul, yer teas ready,those that character of Glasgow,will never change above corporate profits.
Je suis pauvre et je n'ai pas de vêtements contre le froid, et je veux protéger mon corps du froid. Aidez-moi, s'il vous plaît. Je n'oublierai pas cette faveur.😥💦
I don’t know what you mean by pathetic, because if it comes to beauty, Britain surely has a lot of beautiful cities, towns and countryside. Yes, Edinburgh is beautiful, and I lived there, but so are places like York, Bath, Canterbury and others. Also think geographical and sociological context. This is North West Europe, from Britain and Ireland, northern France, Benelux, northern Germany and Denmark. Of course some cities are managed better than others or have had a more advantageous position, however they all share a few similarities, like the brickwork and stone, the port/industrial connections, the weather, the fact that most of these cities are hubs attracting people from all over Europe and the world, the fact that most have been heavily damaged during the war and/or have been through painful deindustrialisation and different stages of regeneration. Not only London and Paris but also places like Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Hamburg, Antwerp, Eindhoven, Dublin, Glasgow, Leeds, Rotterdam, Newcastle, Copenhagen and so on, are dynamic vibrant cities, always changing, always buzzing with life. Not all cities in Europe are like Edinburgh or Florence and not all cities in Britain are like Sheffield or Berlin.
@@threesixnine369six yeah but you cant compare Manchester to Munich or Newcastle to Hamburg. When it comes to Edingburgh and especially Glasgow id rank them above nearly all heavy hitters apart from maybe Berlin
@@BLACKSTA361 I wasn’t doing direct comparisons necessarily, still trying to quantify the criteria for comparison established in the original comment. Was it about architecture and urban fabric? Social fabric? Economics? What are your rankings based on? Are you saying Newcastle is small? Because it is when compared to Hamburg, but Manchester isn’t; and while it might not have the industry of German cities it’s big and vibrant and attracts a lot of people and investment from around the world. Why do Glasgow and Edinburgh rank so high in your rankings? I have actually lived in both. Edinburgh is beautiful and charming, but overrun with tourists and posh people in a limited growth setting. Glasgow is hectic, has its own beautiful heritage, but has also been butchered by outdated visions of what the future will be. There’s a lot of ugly and a lot of beauty, and also in some cases beauty in ugliness. The people are wholesome and it’s one of those cities that truly has a strong personality, similar to the down to earth no nonsense people of New York. The city is however lacking in vision and investment, lagging behind other big cities in Britain and Europe, yet still attracts a lot of people.