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Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, around 1914 looking east. The Willow Tearooms is shown on the right. The location selected by Miss Cranston for the new tearooms was a four-storey former warehouse building in a row of similar buildings erected around 1870 on the south side of Sauchiehall Street, between Wellington Street and Blythswood Street.
The Willow Tearooms in Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow. Charles Rennie Mackintosh was born at 70 Parson Street, Townhead, Glasgow, on 7 June 1868, the fourth of eleven children and second son of William McIntosh, a superintendent and chief clerk of the City of Glasgow Police.
The central part of the street consists of remaining retailers, the McLellan Galleries and the Willow Tearooms, designed in 1903 by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, which has been restored to its original artistic designs and is open to the public as a tea room, restaurant and Mackintosh venue centre. [14]
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Shop at 401 Sauchiehall Street Glasgow (1896) Glasgow School of Art with MacKintosh as project architect (1896) Miss Cranston's Tea Rooms ("The Willow Tearooms") on Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow (1896) Kilmadock Parish Manse near Doune (1897) 11 Margaret Street, Greenock (1897) Kilmacolm Manse (1897) Kirkintilloch Public School (1897)
Miss Cranston's waitresses, seen in the Room de Luxe of the Willow Tea Rooms. Next Kate Cranston gave Mackintosh the major commission for an entire building in Sauchiehall Street, again in collaboration with his wife Margaret MacDonald on designs for the interiors.
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The Room de Luxe at the Willow Tearooms. The Willow Tearooms are tearooms at 217 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, Scotland, designed by internationally renowned architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh, which opened for business in October 1903. They quickly gained enormous popularity, and are the most famous of the many Glasgow tearooms that opened in ...