
It's time we tried to rebuild the ambition of Scottish Modernism
The building just saved was Klein's collaboration with the leading modernist architect (and fellow Borderer) Peter Womersley, who also built Klein's family home close by.
I want to begin in a visceral way, triggered by the current photos of the 1971 studio in this week's press reports. It's essentially intact as an elegant, angular structure – but how neglected as a sight.
READ MORE: Scottish crew 'excluded from Spider Man 4 filming'
Water-damaged, graffiti'd, mossy, glass walls shattered … It's as if the modernism of the place itself had been under attack.
Of course, the real reasons are prosaic. Built in Klein's first burst of success, the studio (latterly promoting local textiles) declined as the weaving industry did in the Borders. It's laid derelict for the last 20 years.
The site has been secured by a brace of august institutions: National Trust for Scotland, Scottish Historic Buildings Trust and the Klein Family Foundation, with the National Lottery Heritage Fund indicating it will fund and support.
Does the Klein studio mean we are finally deciding to treasure and preserve our Modernist past in Scotland? Has our mood shifted on this? Because up till recently, it has mostly seemed vengeful and neglectful.
I'm a fan, though maybe inescapably so. As I revelled in the grid windows and load-bearing columns of these Klein-Womersley buildings, a long-buried memory came to mind. My comprehensive school, St Ambrose RC Secondary, built in 1961.
My feelings about my experiences there ('76-'81) would honestly be both treasurable and vengeful. But to adapt Le Corbusier's phrase, architecturally it was indeed a 'machine for learning'.
Photos on the web show angular glass corridors bearing shuffling teenagers from block to block.
A Guernica-scale metal sculpture, composed of forces and objects, sets you up for the tender mercies of the tech studies building.
In retrospect, I was ripened (and toughened) in the grids of High Modernism. Right across from our Victorian family home, surmounting the West End park, two 14-storey high-rises loomed. All manner of teen troubles tumbled out of them, for me.
So believe me, I can understand the ambivalence about reviving Modernist ruins.
Yet still, there's something about their confidence and optimism that remains compelling. Particularly from our current era's standpoint, where hope for the future feels more fractured and tentative than ever.
On a recent music-biz photo session, we sought out Modernist – indeed, brutalist – scenes and textures, across the expanses of Glasgow.
It was a thrilling brief. We found ourselves glorying in the rough-casting of overbearing concrete structures, loving the infinities implied by paving stones and steps. Given the next Hue And Cry album is 'electro', in the broadest sense, it felt that a celebration of big, confident engineering was a good backdrop.
Yet big, confident engineering often sits at an angle to the hearts and minds of residents and users. The Modernist 'megastructure' (as the architects put it) that made up the bulk of Cumbernauld town centre was guided by cutting-edge theory at the time.
Flows made up of humans, shops, transport and meeting places were elaborately modelled; the whole place was designed so that structures could amend and adapt themselves. It had the spirit of utopia about it.
But the ambivalence about the current demolitions of Cumbernauld's megastructures is manifest. The 2024 book Concrete Dreams: The Rise And Fall Of Cumbernauld Town Centre talked to many locals.
'They had used [the city centre], they were fond of it, they had lovely stories attached to it and they understood the kind of utopian idea of it and why it was being built', said co-author Alison Irvine. 'But yet they still want to get rid of it as well.'
In Glasgow, the blind spots of 20th-century post-war Modernist planners – most obviously their slavish devotion to car use, and to towerblocks replacing tenemental living – is evident to the everyday citizen of the city.
There seems to still be 'future ambition' (in council plans) to roof over the M8 at Charing Cross and make a park out of it. But the smashing of social bonds and continuities can barely be pasted over.
Maybe, to return to the Bernat Klein buildings in Galashiels, we need to make the modernist case at the level of domesticity, community and creativity. Glasgow School of Art's Bruce Peter is the author of the forthcoming volume Modernist Scotland (the book is currently close to its crowdfunding deadline).
Peter lays out 150 post-war buildings, built from 1950-1980, making a case for their preservation (where they still exist).
What a tour he provides! There are small-scale sci-fi extravaganzas I'd never heard of. Like the Dollan Baths in East Kilbride.
Or Womersley's miraculously balancing triangular stand for Gala Fairydean FC. Or Aberdeen University's tomorrowlandish engineering building.
There seem to be many poignant Modernist churches, tucked away in Scottish locales. Poignant, as they were built in an age of secular dominance – though nowadays they look like exactly the kinds of luminous spaces we need (religious or not) to get our heads together.
Go visit St Columba's Parish Church in Glenrothes, or St Francis Xavier's in Falkirk, or St Charles Oratory in Glasgow's Kelvinside. We should still attend to the parlous decay of St Peter's Seminary in Cardross, whose demolition would be such a loss to this tradition.
The tumult of Modernist style in Peter's book makes you reassess buildings you'd taken for granted. Like the sandstone consistency of the 70s extension to the old Mitchell Library in Glasgow, whose solidity and reliability I've leant on for many decades. (Its interiors are well described as 'resembling a luxury hotel in Moscow').
Or even my home town's Monklands Leisure Centre, which I can now see as a brutalist masterpiece of swooping and corrugated concrete (as opposed to somewhere I could grab a ping-pong table).
There are many more exquisite examples of the Scottish Modernist tradition in this book. Peter ends with a plea against the 'eyesore' charge often made against modern-era buildings.
'It is apparent that many people are unable to distinguish between superficial decay spoiling the appearance of a building and the potential of its underlying architecture', he writes. 'When buildings of any kind are neglected or derelict, it is necessary to make leaps of imagination to envision how splendid they could look if sympathetically renovated.'
Exactly this case seems easily made for the Bernat Klein studio. What awaits it, according to the renovation team, is an archive of Klein's most notable fabrics, alongside education programs.
Klein used tweed techniques from the Borders area but crammed multicolours into the threads, taken from the colourations of the Borders.
And his clients: Coco Chanel, Christian Dior, Balenciaga, Pierre Cardin, Yves Saint Laurent … Oh, to be so blithely adorned in dreams. (Although the nightmares of the Cold War, and the Holocaust, of course subtended every escapism.)
We should try to recover at least the optimism and ambition of Scottish Modernism – if we can keep its buildings and methods relevant to our current scale and agenda: community-centred, planet-challenged. A possible goal for Klein's soon-to-be ex-ruin.
The crowdfunder for Bruce Peter's Modernist Scotland is still running at https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/modernist-scotland
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
12 minutes ago
- Scotsman
My Festival: Dawn Steele: 'I am woken by our two sausage dogs at 5am'
The Scottish actor tells us all about her new play, Skye: A Thriller, her love of the Fringe's unpredictable energy, and being woken up by sausage dogs at 5am. Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... There are thousands of shows in Edinburgh this month. Please tell us why we should come and see yours. I loved the play as soon as I read it. Skye: a Thriller is a brand new piece of writing from Ellie Keel and directed by Matthew Illiffe, about memories, love, loss, Skye and ghosts. It felt magical to me and I hope myself and James Robinson leave you feeling this as you walk out of Summerhall after. I have not been on the stage for a long time so I can't wait to bring this story to life! Dawn Steele | Harry Livingstone Who or what was the biggest inspiration for your show? You'll need to ask our brilliant writer Ellie Keel! Who or what are you most excited about seeing this year? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I come to the festival every year but this year my teenage daughter is coming up so I have booked loads of things that I think she will like, for example Shamilton! I'm excited about seeing all my pals' shows too - Hannah Donaldson in Make it Happen, Johnny McKnight in She's Behind You and Bob Daws - who I did Blackbird with many moons ago - in Wodehouse in Wonderland. I've also booked Police Cops: The Original which looks fab. There are too many comedians to catch too, like Michelle Brazier who I loved last year. Who do you most like spending time with in Edinburgh? We have a little group we come up with every year and we stay at my best friend Michael's flat. We cram everything into three days, including a Mother India visit. What I do love about the festival though is the random, brilliant, funny unexpected nights you have seeing stuff you wouldn't normally see, then off to the Traverse, meeting friends old and new, and the inevitable ending at the Pleasance Courtyard. Tell us something about you that would surprise people. I'm up at 5am and in bed at 8.30pm, unless I'm at the Fringe of course! What are the best and worst things that have happened to you at a festival? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The worst - but also completely standard at the Fringe - is missing shows, ending up at wrong venues and a few bad hangovers. The best is just the amazing shows I have seen over the years. Bryony Kimmings I'm a Phoenix Bitch, Mawaan Rizwan was a highlight too. I just love the energy of the Fringe - there really is nowhere like it. I can't wait! What's the first thing you do in the morning and the last thing you do at night? I am woken by our two sausage dogs at 5am, at the minute that's fine as I do about two hours of line learning before I get to rehearsals. The last thing I do is read. I'm out like a light. Thanks for the interview! We'd like to buy you a drink. Where are we going and what are we drinking? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Oh, a frozen margarita for me please from the Summerhall courtyard at 4pm after our show! Skye: a Thriller, Summerhall, 3pm, until 25 August


Scotsman
42 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Food spots to try before the Oasis gig that aren't ‘Half the World Away'
Hard Rock Cafe Edinburgh – near the Princes Street tram stop Known for its iconic music memorabilia and classic American cuisine, Hard Rock Cafe Edinburgh is marking the return of one of the UK's biggest bands with a special pre-concert brunch offering. To celebrate the long-anticipated Oasis reunion, guests can book in for the Champagne Supernova Breakfast: a themed experience perfect for pre-gig plans. Enjoy your choice of any main from the breakfast menu (options include pancakes, avocado toast, the full Scottish and other morning favourites) served with a glass of Champagne as you enjoy the greatest hits from Oasis. The full bar menu will also be available on the day. Vittoria on the Walk – near the McDonald Road Tram stop Over in Leith, Vittoria on the Walk is the perfect pre-gig pit stop before heading to see Oasis. A firm favourite in among locals, this lively Italian restaurant is known for its warm hospitality, generous plates of pasta, wood-fired pizzas, and relaxed, welcoming vibe. Whether you're meeting friends for a bite or fuelling up before the show, it's an ideal stop-off along the route – offering great food, quick service and a buzzing atmosphere to get you in the mood for the main event. Brunswick Book Club – near the McDonald Road Tram Stop Just a short stroll from the tram stop at McDonald Road, Brunswick Book Club is the kind of laid-back spot Oasis fans will love. With a big outdoor terrace, it's the ideal spot for meeting up before the gig if the weather is nice. Inside, the vibe is cosy and unpretentious, with the menu serving up proper comfort food alongside craft beers and fun cocktails. Whether you're grabbing a pint, a bite or just soaking up the buzz, it's a solid choice for anyone making a night of it. Dulse – near the West End Tram Stop For those marking a special occasion or looking to elevate their pre-concert plans, the sleek seafood spot, Dulse set in the West End offers a more refined take on the night out. From chef Dean Banks, this elegant yet welcoming seafood restaurant is known for its focus on fresh, Scottish ingredients and beautifully balanced flavours. Situated just a short stroll from the West End tram stop, fans can enjoy exceptional seafood and drinks before hopping on the tram to Murrayfield, making it the ideal spot for pre-concert plans. 1 . Contributed Hard Rock Cafe Edinburgh is hosting a 'Champagne Supernova Breakfast' event Photo: Submitted Photo Sales


Daily Record
42 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Historic stately home in West Lothian provides splendid backdrop for Boiler Room session
Armand van Helden and Ewan McVicar delighted thousands of revellers at Hopetoun House Thousands of dance music fans descended on a stately home in West Lothian at the weekend for a two-day event. The grand looking 325-year-old Hopetoun House near the village of Newton provided an incredible stage backdrop for the occasion. Looking in the opposite direction, beyond the greenery the Queensferry Crossing dominated the skyline. Hopetoun House is owned by a charity trust but the south wing remains the family home of the 4th Marquess of Linlithgow. The Hopetoun House Sessions is a new series of outdoor summer shows by the Scottish events company, EE Live, who also organise the Terminal V festival. On Saturday, the headline act was Australian house and techno producer Fisher who thrilled the crowds. Comments on social media during the day confirmed that the music wasn't confined to the site, with many over the water in Fife being able to hear the party in full swing quite clearly. The weather remained fair for the crowds who attended over the two days with showers contained to Sunday morning, and the sun was out ensuring the site was dry again before the gates opened for the afternoon. There was an even bigger crowd on the Sunday with broadcaster and promoter Boiler Room taking over the stage for the day. It was a prevalently youngish crowd who queued patiently at the gates to access the site where the usual, quite pricey, festival-type bars and eateries. The Boiler Room stage set-up allows the crowd to get up really close and rub shoulders with the DJs as they perform. Top of the bill was legendary house music veteran and speed garage pioneer Armand van Helden, the former Grammy Award nominee from Boston rolled out a set laden with classics including his own remixed versions of Sneaker Pimps' Spin Spin Sugar and Tori Amos's Professional Widow, which went to number 1 in the UK Singles Chart. He also delivered Bonkers, his collaboration with Dizzee Rascal from 2009, and the following year's Barbra Streisand track which he released as half of duo Duck Sauce with Canadian DJ/producer A-Trak, it hit number 3 in the UK. His set delighted the euphoric dancing crowd further as lasers and searing flames lit up the West Lothian sky. Prior to Armand van Helden's appearance, Scotland's own Ewan McVicar had upped the tempo a bit in preparation for the Bostonian's arrival and there was a maturity about the set he delivered, which didn't include his 2021 debut single, Tell me Something Good. Earlier in the day an international line-up featuring; Swatt Team, Messie, Saint Ludo, Notion, and a back-to-back set featuring Oppidan and Todd Edwards had kept the receptive crowd moving. The event rounded off at 10.30pm but with no on-site parking facility at the venue and revellers relying on being picked up, taking a taxi, or hopping on the Happy Bus, it would be a few hours before the majority made it home, with many departing on foot for lengthy walks to pre-determined pick-up points elsewhere. However, they happily wandered off into the relative darkness following a great day dancing in surroundings of splendour.