Maryhill Community Centre and Maryhill Integration Network
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Maryhill Community Centre
Maryhill Community Centre
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
The new Burgh Hall building at Gairbraid Avenue was formally opened on Friday 26th April 1878. It came about due to the increasing population growth in the town of Maryhill and the lawlessness this created. The H.M. Inspector of Police for Scotland had insisted that the Maryhill Police Commissioners take steps to provide a more suitable building for police purposes. They allocated a portion of ground at the junction of Gairbraid Avenue and Wyndford Street, (now Maryhill Road) and plans were prepared which included the necessary police accommodation, court room, bathhouse, washhouse, fire station and a public hall to seat 900.
The design work was carried out by Duncan McNaughtan, a local Glasgow based architect. He was born in Rutherglen in 1845. Between 1868 and 1870 he worked in London and in 1871 returned to Glasgow to commence business on his own account at 178 St. Vincent Street.
It would appear that he won a competition in 1876 to design the Maryhill Burgh Halls. It resembles a French hotel, a style that was relatively popular both in Glasgow and internationally in the 1870s.
Maryhill Community Centre is managed by Glasgow Life on behalf of Glasgow City Council as a resource for the local community. It is home to a range of community groups, most notably the Maryhill Integration Network.
Maryhill Integration Network (MIN) was established in 2001 and became a registered charity (SCO37300) in March 2006. They are a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation with a voluntary Board of Trustees.
MIN brings refugee, migrant and local communities together through, art, social, cultural and educational groups and projects, offering people a chance to learn new skills, meet new people, share experiences and take part in worthwhile activities to improve their lives and the life of their communities.
MIN works in partnership to develop projects and services that meet the needs of the local community. These aim to build bonds and links within and between communities to encourage cross-cultural understanding and celebrate diversity. They understand that integration is not possible by working with only a particular group within the community and so encourages participation from people of all backgrounds, ages and abilities living within Greater Maryhill, the North West area of Glasgow and beyond.
Sources
Accessed September 11th 2020. http://www.maryhillintegration.org.uk/.
Photo taken by members of MIN
Photo taken by members of MIN