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A famous Glasgow tea rooms, originally designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, is to be taken over by the National Trust for Scotland.
Regarded as Mackintosh's most complete interior design, Willow Tea Rooms is the best surviving example of a tea room designed by the architect.
Two people pivotal in saving one of Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s historic tea rooms in the heart of Scotland’s largest city have been made MBEs.
The unique tea room, which is 13.5m long, will be the centrepiece of the museum's design galleries when it opens to the public in 2018.
The original 1903 Willow Tea Rooms were designed in their entirety by Mackintosh and he had total control inside and out.
The tea room in Sauchiehall Street was recreated from Charles Rennie Mackintosh's original designs.
The venue was the original Willow Tea Rooms building at 217 Sauchiehall Street, first opened in 1903, and the architect responsible was of course Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
Saviours of historic Mackintosh tea room made MBEs for restoration work Celia Sinclair Thornqvist and Professor Pamela Robertson have both been recognised in the New Year’s Honours list.
Two people pivotal in saving one of Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s historic tea rooms in the heart of Scotland’s largest city have been made MBEs. Celia Sinclair Thornqvist and Professor Pamela Robertson ...