Glasgow fire destroys historic building, snarls train services

[ad_1]

Text to Speech Icon

Listen to this article

Estimated 2 minutes

The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

A major fire in the heart of Glasgow crippled Scottish train services Monday as firefighters worked to douse the blaze that destroyed a four-storey building near Scotland’s busiest railway station.

Glasgow Central Station was closed and all travel to, from and through the station was expected to be disrupted, according to rail operators. There was no estimate when the station would reopen.

The fire broke out Sunday afternoon in a vape shop on Union Street, next to the station. Flames engulfed the building, filling the frames of windows and shooting from the dome-capped roof.

A tape is pulled across a street police and others in reflective vests in an urban setting, with smoky skies above them.
An area near the station is cordoned off on Monday. (Robert Perry/PA/The Associated Press)

The building, which dates to 1851, collapsed as it burned through the night, leaving only the facade standing.

Paul Sweeney, a member of the Scottish Parliament, likened it to the remains left after the Nazi bombing of Britain in 1940-41.

“It’s been completely wiped out, destroyed,” Sweeney told the BBC. “The building is a gutted shell. It looks like something out of the Blitz.”

No injuries reported

People standing behind a police roadblock said they were shocked to see the ruins.

“It’s just so sad,” Emma Reid said. “It’s such an iconic building.”

A café, fish and chip shop and hair salon were among the businesses wrecked by the fire.

“We are absolutely devastated to confirm that the shop has sadly been destroyed in the fire,” Sexy Coffee said on Instagram, though it vowed to rebuild.

There were no injuries reported, Scottish Fire and Rescue Service said.

A pair of cranes are shown in the air as smoke surrounds older-looking buildings.
Firefighters battle the remnants of the blaze on Monday. (Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

[ad_2]

Source link

Leave a Reply