The original ms cranstons tea room now fully restored as mackintosh at the willow 217 sauchiehall street glasgow g2 3ex home mackintosh at the willow home.
Miss cranston s tea rooms glasgow.
In 1950 glasgow corporation acquired the ingram street building and the tea rooms were used for storage.
It is the only tea room where mackintosh was in control of the exterior and the interior and his arrangement of the internal spaces and his designs for the furniture are unparalleled in his designs for tea rooms.
Miss cranston s original willow tea rooms at 217 sauchiehall street glasgow was designed by charles rennie mackintosh in 1903.
She is nowadays chiefly remembered as a major patron of charles rennie mackintosh and margaret macdonald in glasgow scotland.
The name of miss cranston s tea rooms lives on in reminiscences of glasgow in its heyday.
The tea rooms at 217 sauchiehall street first opened in 1903 and are the only surviving tea rooms designed by charles rennie mackintosh for local entrepreneur and patron miss catherine cranston.
Catherine cranston widely known as kate cranston or miss cranston was a leading figure in the development of tea rooms.
The tea rooms are modelled on kate cranston s ingram street tea rooms from the early 1900s recreating the fabulous interiors from the white dining room and the chinese blue room.
Before the building was demolished in 1971 the rooms were thoroughly documented and catalogued.
This historic building is of the greatest significance for scotland s design heritage.
Our tea rooms are open daily monday to saturday 9am to 5pm and sundays 10am 5pm.
Inspired by the works of charles rennie mackintosh the willow tea rooms at 97 buchanan street is the place to go when out and about in the city centre.
At buchanan street inspired by the works of charles rennie mackintosh the tea rooms are modelled on kate cranston s ingram street tea rooms from the early 1900s.
The extensive use of contrasting colours within the rooms adds to the atmosphere and experience.
Created in 1886 miss cranston s ingram street tea rooms continued in the food catering tradition for over sixty years.
The name sauchiehall is derived from saugh the scots word for a willow tree and haugh meadow.