From Deseret News archives:
Glasgow A city for shoppers
Time for tourists to leave their money behind is usually built into most organized tours. But in this case, our tour guide had failed to mention just how much of an activity this could be in the center of this quite cosmopolitan Scottish city.
Properly scolded by a number of excited shoppers in his charge, he clued us in to Glasgow being "the second-largest shopping area in the United Kingdom, second only to London." Tour guide Gordon Tait says buildings that used to house banks and shipping offices, now house shops, restaurants and nightclubs. Many of those buildings are beautifully restored Victorian structures.
Glasgow is a very walkable city, set out on a grid system.
Pedestrians rule in the city center, in an area known as the Golden Z.
Three main streets, all filled with shops and malls, form a Z pattern.
In one store, I ran into a woman who said she'd come from Norway to shop.
Moira Dyer, with the Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, wasn't surprised to hear that. "It's become very fashionable now to nip across to Glasgow for a shopping break," said Dyer, thanks to low-cost carriers serving Glasgow's airports. A lot of Scandinavians come to shop, as do people from the north of England, she said.
"I've heard it described as Manhattan with a Scottish accent," said Dyer, with a laugh. Although she's paid to be a Glasgow booster, its hard not to agree with Dyer's claim that Glasgow is "very much seen as a city of style."
Banners flying outside the City Chambers, or city hall, in George Square, proclaim "Glasgow: Scotland with Style," and advertise a Web site for visitors to find out more: www.seeglasgow.com.
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