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‘Ecotowers’ plaza plan to save city high-rises
 
An artist's impression, above, of the new ecotowers of Laurieston Plaza which could be created using the old high-rise flats on the site
An artist's impression, above, of the new ecotowers of Laurieston Plaza which could be created using the old high-rise flats on the site
 

PLANS have been unveiled to turn a dozen high-rises facing demolition into "ecotowers".

Developer Paul Mugnaioni claims the condemned blocks, and the reputation of multi-storeys in Glasgow, can be "rehabilitated" to become affordable private apartments.

He says his proposals would be 23 times greener' than current plans to demolish and build new houses on the sites.

Mr Mugnaioni, director of housing at Glasgow City Council in the 1980s, wants to transform two multi-storeys in Laurieston, next to the successful New Gorbals scheme, into "ecotowers" - called Laurieston Plaza - as well as three in Ibrox and one in Maryhill used as a backdrop in the comedy series Still Game.

He claims that by saving the costs of demolition - £6m for Norfolk Court alone - and buying the blocks from Glasgow Housing Association, the public purse would also benefit.

Two of the four towers in Laurieston are to be demolished this summer and it had previously been claimed the proposals to retain Norfolk Court would delay the planned regeneration of the area, with the resident-led steering committee having rejected the scheme.

It's understood Mr Mugnaioni has also been told by senior figures in the city council they are hostile to the plan, with concerns over car parking and the need to amend the city plan.

But Mr Mugnaioni is confident he will be able to persuade the owners of the blocks, GHA, and the steering committee to save the remaining two, claiming they will become an anchor development for the wider regeneration of the area.

Norfolk Court would provide a template for the other high-rises, with external walls removed and reclad in thermally-efficient glass, with wind turbines providing much of the power.

Mr Mugnaioni said: "It took a vast amount of energy to build Glasgow's high rises, and our engineering reports say they were so well constructed they are built to last for 90 to 100 years.

"Those engineers have found it is 23 times more energy efficient to take those sturdy frames and completely re-clad them in the most thermally efficient glass and steel materials rather than demolish and rebuild."

But Fraser Stewart, director of New Gorbals Housing Association, said the ecotowers would "compromise what is probably the single biggest housing-led regeneration project in the UK".

Publication date 10/03/08

Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 11:18am Mon 10 Mar 08
A pile of garbage, the sooner they are disposed of , the better.

If they are an anchor for this re-generation then why have they never been supported by anybody else, considering they do not contribute to a wider plan.

They consume too much landspace, nothing can be built around them, so it appears this loony wants to hold this part of the city back - if it was a failure as a council housing block, then why should it survive as luxury apartments.

This place is bonkers! No wonder more people are choosing to leave every year!

Posted by: jim, Glasgow on 12:01pm Mon 10 Mar 08
I agree ,There could be a better use of space.That will be long and help that community.
Posted by: Meep, Shawlands on 12:07pm Mon 10 Mar 08
This is the same Mr Mugnaioni, whose absolute incompetence allowed the council stock in Glasgow to fall into disrepair in the 80's. It because of his decisions that council estates became war zones. That man should be held accountable for his actions or lack of them in the 80's. Scum.
Posted by: Sydney Meriwether, Glasgow on 6:08pm Mon 10 Mar 08
He says his proposals would be 23 times greener' than current plans to demolish and build new houses on the sites.

Aye, very good, so he's jumping on the eco-bandwagon to try and get his hands on property paid for by the public, so that he can convert them to yuppie flats at a huge profit... and all this from a man who jumped ship with four other officials from Glasgow housing department in 1987 to set up his own private housing scheme with Nationwide Anglia... away ye go!
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