
All the George Square statues have been taken down
The 11 bronze statues were taken down this week by specialist contractors using cranes and harnesses.
The last monuments to be removed were the equestrian statues of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert at the west side of the square and the seated statue of James Watt.
READ NEXT:Glasgow's Bonfire Night fireworks display could return this year
They will be removed to a storage location where they will be cleaned and then any restoration work carried out.
The statues will be returned to take their place in the newly redeveloped square, which is expected to be complete and open to the public in the autumn of 2026,
(Image: Colin Mearns)
George Square is now closed off to the public and sealed off with hoardings, getting ready for the redevelopment work to start.
The 11 bronze statues are of famous and renowned people for their achievements across politics, arts, science and military.
They are poets, Robert Burns, and Thomas Campbell, engineer, James Watt, chemist, Thomas Graham, politicians, Robert Peel, William Gladstone and James Oswald, military figures, Field Marshall Lord Clyde and John Moore and two horseback statues of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.
(Image: Colin Mearns)
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The contract for the construction work was signed off earlier.
The contract, worth £ 20.499 million awarded to Rainton Constructions.
Councillor Angus Millar, Convener for City Centre Recovery at Glasgow City Council, said: "Over the 16 or so months from June, we will see a new and significantly improved public space take shape – a new square on a par with many of our international peers, one Glaswegians can be proud of, and which is fitting of a city of our standing.'
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