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  2. Heelas of Reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heelas_of_Reading

    John Lewis continues to thrive in Reading where many stores have left or gone into receivership. Over the last few years and since Covid struck, John Lewis Reading has encouraged external companies to buy space in its store. Ori Café and David Clulow opticians were located where the Haberdashery dept was previously located, on the mezzanine floor.

  3. St Andrew House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Andrew_House

    St Andrew House (now styled as the Premier Inn Glasgow Buchanan Galleries) is a prominent high-rise building in the centre of Glasgow, Scotland.. It has been a prominent landmark on the eastern end of the city's Sauchiehall Street since the mid-1960s when it was completed, and was one of the first post-war high rise buildings in the city centre.

  4. Buchanan Wharf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchanan_Wharf

    Buchanan Wharf is a complex of five mixed use buildings in the Tradeston area of Glasgow, Scotland.The complex comprises a total of five buildings, Clyde Place House, Tradescroft, Windmillcroft, Wellcroft and Grays Hill, with main usage being designated as office buildings.

  5. Buchanan Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchanan_Street

    The original Western Club building in Buchanan Street, Glasgow. At the start of the street where it meets Argyle Street and St Enoch Square the historic Argyll Arcade [10] [11] which opened in 1827 with sixty-three shops and is now the oldest Victorian shopping centre in Britain, and its near neighbour award-winning Princes Square indoor mall face across to the stores which make up the iconic ...

  6. Richard Livingstone (businessman) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Livingstone...

    In 1997, Livingstone married Claire Burns, the daughter of John Burns, who founded the Derwent London property group. They are now divorced. [2] Livingstone is Jewish. [2]The Evening Standard notes that they are eager to avoid publicity and seek to lead a normal life for the sake of their children, and calls them "arguably the lowest-profile billionaire siblings in London" and "these most ...

  7. James Buchanan of Drumpellier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Buchanan_of_Drumpellier

    The estate was reacquired by James' nephew, David Buchanan in 1808 (later known as David Buchanan Carrick). [3] In 1777 Buchanan Street in Glasgow was started to be built on lands he inherited from his father, and is named after his family. Around 1780 he seems to have relocated to Edinburgh.

  8. Andrew Buchanan of Drumpellier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Buchanan_of_Drumpellier

    He sold the bulk of his estates to his cousin, Andrew Stirling (of William Stirling & Sons). The estate was reacquired by James' nephew, David Buchanan in 1808 (later known as David Buchanan Carrick). George Buchanan of Mount Vernon did not live long to enjoy his properties, urban and rural. He died on Tuesday, 20 July 1762, at the early age of ...

  9. Parliamentary Road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parliamentary_Road

    The final remains of Parliamentary Road were removed in the 1990s when the construction of the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall and the Buchanan Galleries shopping mall over the western end of the road took place, and an eastern stub disappeared under a five-a-side football complex.