CPD: Glass in Traditional Buildings with Darren McLean

Support us

Like many other charities, the coronavirus outbreak is having a major impact on our activities, threatening our crucial work to protect, repair and celebrate Glasgow’s rich built heritage. As a result, we expect to lose an important part of our income this year.

We are therefore asking that if you are able to support our conservation and outreach work,
please consider donating to the Trust.

Wednesday 12th August 2020 | 12.30-1.30pm | GCHT Zoom meeting

Original, historic glass lends character to many buildings and can also influence the appearance of entire streetscapes. But what is the difference between plate glass, sheet glass and drawn glass? How was it made? How authentic are bullseye panes and were they really used in the past? What did the Georgians do on the other side of their obscured glass?

Join Conservation Consultant Darren McLean for this online technical CPD to discuss these questions and debunk some common myths about traditional and historic glass.

£15 per person / £10 for students.

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All sessions are recognised by the Institute of Historic Building Conservation (IHBC) as being capable of contributing to the obligatory CPD requirements of Full Members (see www.ihbc.org.uk)

We are using Zoom to broadcast our live talks. You can join these events as a participant without creating a Zoom account. You do not need to have a webcam or a microphone to join the event as a participant.

You will receive instructions on joining the event by email. If you haven’t received anything by midday on the day of the event, please check your spam folder and then contact us.

You might also be interested in…

Glasgow Historic Environment: A Snapshot – 2019

Ever wondered which buildings in your neighbourhood are listed, or even on Scotland’s Buildings at Risk Register?

Our new interactive map shows data collated between February and April 2018 which gives a snapshot of the current state of Glasgow’s historic built environment.

Blog Post: Ghosts and Zombies

Read our latest blog post about our Ghost Signs of Glasgow project, pondering the nature of ghost signs and what they tell us about the urban landscape.

Enjoy Family Fun with our Kids Trails!

Download our Kid’s Heritage Trails!

Become a Friend of Glasgow City Heritage Trust

Glasgow City Heritage Trust is an independent charity and your support is crucial to ensure that our charitable work promoting the understanding, appreciation and conservation of Glasgow’s historic buildings for the benefit of the city’s communities and its visitors continues now, and in the future.

The easiest way to support the Trust’s work is to join our loyalty scheme. Our tiered loyalty scheme means you can choose the level that’s right for you.

CPD: How Lime Mortar Works, with David Wiggins Ph.D.

Support us

Like many other charities, the coronavirus outbreak is having a major impact on our activities, threatening our crucial work to protect, repair and celebrate Glasgow’s rich built heritage. As a result, we expect to lose an important part of our income this year.

We are therefore asking that if you are able to support our conservation and outreach work,
please consider donating to the Trust.

Wednesday 15th July 2020 | 12.30-1.30pm | GCHT Zoom Meeting

Lime mortar has been used with stone since Roman times for building in Scotland. Many of Scotland’s traditional buildings were constructed and finished using lime mortars, for bedding, pointing, harling and renders. Lime mortar remains the expert’s material of choice for repairs and maintenance to traditional stone buildings and this technical CPD will discuss the correct way to specify and apply it on conservation projects, along with debunking some myths and answering commonly asked questions on its use.

This CPD will be delivered by David Wiggins Ph.D., Principal Engineer with Curtins. David is a Conservation-Accredited Engineer (CARE) and is actively involved in research & development pertaining to the technical conservation of masonry in addition to delivering repair, rehabilitation and conservation projects in practice. He is a regular speaker on the subject at technical lectures and seminars.

All GCHT CPD sessions are recognised by the IHBC, and attendees can obtain a CPD certificate upon completion.

£15 per person / £10 for students.

[ESPRESSO_TICKET_SELECTOR event_id=15360]

 

All sessions are recognised by the Institute of Historic Building Conservation (IHBC) as being capable of contributing to the obligatory CPD requirements of Full Members (see www.ihbc.org.uk)

We are using Zoom to broadcast our live talks. You can join these events as a participant without creating a Zoom account. You do not need to have a webcam or a microphone to join the event as a participant.

You will receive instructions on joining the event by email. If you haven’t received anything by midday on the day of the event, please check your spam folder and then contact us.

You might also be interested in…

Glasgow Historic Environment: A Snapshot – 2019

Ever wondered which buildings in your neighbourhood are listed, or even on Scotland’s Buildings at Risk Register?

Our new interactive map shows data collated between February and April 2018 which gives a snapshot of the current state of Glasgow’s historic built environment.

Blog Post: Ghosts and Zombies

Read our latest blog post about our Ghost Signs of Glasgow project, pondering the nature of ghost signs and what they tell us about the urban landscape.

Enjoy Family Fun with our Kids Trails!

Download our Kid’s Heritage Trails!

Become a Friend of Glasgow City Heritage Trust

Glasgow City Heritage Trust is an independent charity and your support is crucial to ensure that our charitable work promoting the understanding, appreciation and conservation of Glasgow’s historic buildings for the benefit of the city’s communities and its visitors continues now, and in the future.

The easiest way to support the Trust’s work is to join our loyalty scheme. Our tiered loyalty scheme means you can choose the level that’s right for you.

Exhibition: Glasgow’s Red Giants + Other Images

An exhibition and charitable sale of original artwork and prints by our very own Professor Robin Webster OBE RSA FRIAS.

Alasdair Gray once remarked that one of the problems with Glasgow is that there are not enough drawings or paintings that celebrate it. So here is an attempt to remedy this in a small way.

I am motivated by the quality of the city’s architecture, and its large number of listed buildings “at risk” makes me want to encourage more people to appreciate and value it. The work focuses mainly on the large red sandstone buildings in the city centre, built when Glasgow was the wealthy second city of the British Empire, although there are also other images of different buildings in the city.

– Robin Webster

There are two parts to the works on show: the first is a series of limited edition digital prints in which Robin has manipulated photographs in order to single out and draw to people’s attention the size and impact of the architecture, in the hope that they will look again. These prints retain some of the buildings’ sharpness and details, while emphasising their impact, weight and solidity.

In the second part Robin has explored the flamboyant richness of the city’s built fabric in a freehand and more painterly fashion in a series of original watercolours, encouraging us to appreciate the many qualities of our great city.

Robin is an architect who was born in Glasgow, the twin son of Gordon Webster and grandson of Alf Webster, both well known stained glass artists. He was educated at the University of Cambridge and the Bartlett at UCL. He worked for Gillespie Kidd and Coia architects in Glasgow for a brief period in 1961-62, and ran his own practice in London and Aberdeen until 2005, when he became a partner of cameronwebster architects in Glasgow along with his daughter and son in law. He has taught at Cambridge, the Bartlett, The Mackintosh School of Architecture GSA, Washington University St Louis, and was Professor of Architecture and Head of School at The Scott Sutherland School in the Robert Gordon University Aberdeen from 1984 until 2004. He has drawn and painted all his life.

This exhibition has now ended. Digital Prints and Framed Watercolours from the exhibition are available to purchase in our online shop.