The Fairfield yard has been a part of Govan's shipbuilding history for over a hundred years and was one of the earliest shipyards on the river. This huge building was the headquarters for what was arguably the largest and most successful of the Clyde shipyards. Designed by John Keppie (from the same stable as Charles Rennie Mackintosh) and built between 1889 and 1891, the Italianate design housed the design and administration offices of a massive commercial empire.
The yard has survived many ups and downs in the industry, and is still in operation under BAE systems. However, the A-listed building was left to rot in 2001 when BAE decided it was surplus to requirements, and rapidly fell into such major disrepair that it was placed on the buildings at risk register.
Fortunately, Govan Workspace were able to take on the massive task of looking after the place, and with suitable funding from various sources managed to get the roof watertight and the place cleaned up enough that they can now rent out some of the upper offices to local small businesses.
On the ground floor, they have installed a rather comprehensive array of exhibits and information boards detailing the history of the yard, the local people who worked there, and Clyde shipbuilding in general, with lots of interactive screens and videos. There's so much information available that it's going to take more than one visit to take it all in.
The grand boardroom is a wonderful space, and on this visit you could sit around the board table and watch a video about the history of the yard, before wandering through the connected rooms with the other displays.
They have a classroom area for school parties and other events too, and as the restoration project continues more facilities will be developed.
This is clearly a well-loved building by the local volunteers who were staffing it on our visit, and a warm Govan welcome is guaranteed. At the moment they are open from 13.00-16.00 Monday to Friday, and the same on Saturdays during July and August. I wish them all the best with the massive restoration task, and look forward to returning when things are a bit more developed. read more