Business owners 'heartbroken' after retail units destroyed in Glasgow fire

Iona YoungBBC Scotland
News imageCourtney MacKinnon A woman with pink hair stands in the middle of the street with a light brown Adidas coat onCourtney MacKinnon
Courtney's business burnt down the day after she celebrated its fourth anniversary

Business owners have said they are "heartbroken" after dozens of retail units burnt to the ground during a fire in Glasgow.

More than 250 firefighters were called in to tackle the blaze that started in a vape shop on Sunday, before it engulfed the entire building on Union Corner next to Central Station.

The B-listed Victorian property was home to many independent businesses that have been left with nowhere to work from after the building collapsed.

Studios and expensive equipment were destroyed in the fire, and people have donated more than £20,000 to fundraisers to help deal with the financial impact.

Rail operators have warned there will be days of disruption to travel.

First Minister John Swinney attended the scene on Monday and said the Scottish government would contribute financially to help the council.

But there is no clear recovery plan for local businesses yet.

Courtney MacKinnon has run a hairdressing business called Cece's Salon in the building for the past four years.

She told BBC Scotland News she had been left devastated by the destruction and ddid not know what the future would hold.

"It's really shocking, the amount of small businesses that are gone," she said.

"Everybody there works so hard, it's difficult for everyone. Everything seems to be gone."

Watch: Fire crews fight blaze near Glasgow Central Station

MacKinnon was alerted to the news when a friend phoned her on Sunday night and said that the building had gone on fire after what sounded like an explosion.

It came the day after she had celebrated her fourth year in business.

"I thought I would have many more years there," she said. "I'd had friends and family over to celebrate.

"I've put everything into that space, so for all that to be gone is difficult – it's how I make a life."

She said there was still no information yet on when business owners could get back into the building.

News imageEmma Taff Emma has long brown hair and smiles in front of shelves of nail polishEmma Taff
Emma Taff ran a nail studio in the building wrecked by fire near Glasgow Central Station

Emma Taff, whose business Tafftastic Nails was based in the building, said: "It didn't feel real. It feels like I'm watching a film.

"It still doesn't feel real even today, I still feel like I'm going to go into work and it'll still be there. My hearts breaks for myself, and every other small business in the building."

She added: "Everyone lost a little bit of themselves [that] night.

"We will come back and we will be stronger, it's just going to take a little bit of time."

News imageA 3D image, generated from satellite images, showing Glasgow Central Station and the building in the same block which was on fire overnight. We are looking in a south-west direction from above the city at a satellite image from 2024. The building which was on fire is situated right next to the main entrance of the station on the corner of a long, unbroken row of buildings running up the east side of the station building parallel with the tracks. The five-storey, stone building has multiple retail spaces at ground level extending south and west from the crossroads and a grey dome on the corner of the building rises above the slate roof. The 19th century Grand Central Hotel next door, which forms the northern facade of the train station, is two storeys taller with a high gabled roof full of windows protruding from the garret rooms. Behind the hotel the huge glass roof of the station, formed of multiple smaller glass peaks running in parallel with the tracks. It covers all the platforms, with the train tracks seen curving out of station at the top of the image. Image source: Google.

At the height of the incident, 18 fire engines and specialist resources, including a high-volume pump drawing water from the River Clyde, were deployed to the scene.

The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) said there were no reported casualties.

Glasgow Central Station, which is next to the damaged building, was closed on Sunday night and all trains to and from the station were cancelled on Monday and Tuesday.

ScotRail warned that disruption would continue for "several days".

SFRS confirmed a preliminary multi-agency investigation into the cause of the fire was underway, but it "cannot at this early stage speculate on what happened".

It warned the investigation could be hampered by the "significant damage".

News imageUnion Street in Glasgow - teams of firefighters are tackling smoke coming from a row of shops, including a Subway sandwich and a Paddy Power.
News imagePA Media Huge thick clouds of black smoke billow into the evening sky with several emergency service vehicles parked in the streetPA Media

The fire began in a vape shop next to the Glasgow Central Station side entrance on Union Street
The blaze engulfed the entire building on Union Corner

Alessandro Varese, who owns the iconic Blue Lagoon chip shop on Gordon Street and neighbouring Sexy Coffee, said both had been "completely destroyed".

He said another branch of Blue Lagoon on Argyle Street was closed because of smoke damage, while an office on the third floor of the Gordon Street building had also been wrecked in the blaze.

Varese said he wanted all of the business owners in the block to "stick together" and rebuild.

News imageAlessandro Varese A man wearing a grey turtle neck stands in the doorway of a coffee shop with his arms foldedAlessandro Varese
Several of Alessandro's businesses were impacted

"Initially we didn't panic too much, because we thought it was contained," he said.

"It was a shock. It was an anxious wait to see the total extent of the damage but as people will see, the building is almost completely destroyed and I suspect it will get flattened."

He added: "The good thing was that nobody got hurt. It's so important that we stick together, because it's such a prominent spot in the city that everybody comes together, to rebuild and reopen so we can all try and get back to business."

'Years of work' lost

Scott McNally at Lucky in Love Tattoos told BBC Scotland News that the building was just a shell after the fire.

He said he wanted to protect the eight self-employed tattoo artists that worked from his store.

"Thank god nobody got hurt, but we have lost four years of work," said McNally.

"There were so many irreplaceable designs and custom-made art work that has been destroyed.

"There is around £30,000 of equipment lost. We are already planning to find a new venue.

"I'm just trying to keep the fall-out as limited as possible."

News imagePA Media Swinney wearing a bright orange ScotRail high‑visibility jacket stands in front of an emergency cordon on a wet city street, with fire crews and fire engines working in the background amid smokePA Media
First Minister John Swinney attended the scene of the fire on Monday

The housing and homelessness charity Shelter said their shop on Union Street had been "completely destroyed".

Shelter Scotland director Alison Watson said the charity was "heartbroken".

"Crucially, everyone who was in our Union Street shop is safe," she added.

"The shop was evacuated as soon as the alarm was raised, and our team are now being supported by colleagues."

On Monday, the first minister said the government recognised that the fire was an "unexpected and extraordinary" incident in the city that would impact businesses that had lost their premises, or had just lost footfall since part of the city has been closed down.

He added: "We do now have to think about how we support those local businesses, how we make sure there is safety on the site, it's secured, how we can get travel back active again."