Cumbernauld is a new town in North Lanarkshire, Scotland, created in 1956 as a population overflow for Glasgow. Its population was 49,664 at the time of the 2001 census. The name comes from the Scots Gaelic comar nan allt, meaning the meeting of the waters.
Cumbernauld (Modern Gaelic Comainn nan Allt) sits on top of one of the highest hills in the low-lying Scottish central belt. This has given it its old Scot's nomen, 'the windy toun'. It was long a staging-post for changing horses between Glasgow and Edinburgh. The Spur Inn in the village still has the archway for the stagecoaches.
After the creation of the new town, diverse industries such as high-tech, electronics, and chemical and food processing became large employers, along with the UK government tax collection office, the Inland Revenue.
During its construction beginning 1955, under the designer's eye of Geoffrey Copcutt, Cumbernauld's town centre's daring megastructure architecture was highly praised. Architects, designers, town planners and students of many disciplines visited Cumbernauld from around the globe to marvel at the town, for many years heralded as a utopian construction.
The supposed core of Cumbernauld remains the "Town Centre", all of which is essentially contained within one structure, segmented into "phases", the first of which was completed in 1967, the latest of which began construction in May 2003 for completion around September 2004. Designed to be a commerce centre, an entertainment and business venue and a luxury accommodation site, it was widely accepted as the UK's first shopping mall and was the world's first multi-level covered town centre. But the town never developed to its planned size, and the town centre has never had the life envisaged by town planners. Wealthy occupiers for the centre's penthouses never materialised and some now lie empty and derelict. Further expansion has been primarily to provide further space for shops. A substantial portion of the Town Centre has been bulldozed to make way for a new shopping and leisure complex.
The residential structure of Cumbernauld is noteworthy in that there were no pedestrian crossings, i.e. zebra or pelican crossings, or traffic lights until a set of traffic / pelican lights were erected beside the new Tesco Extra, opened January 2004—pedestrians traverse roads by bridge or underpass. This has led to the suggestion that the town is car-centric, and difficult to navigate by foot. However, residents also find that the quiet network of paths which cross the town from one side to the other provides a pleasing alternative to walking beside the busy main roads.
The town has a reputation as grim and isolating, and finds itself in the bizarre position of having above average income and below average unemployment and child poverty rates, yet also below average house prices for the region. However, the town's housing is well planned and generally of high quality, making it a source of local civic pride in stark contrast to the town centre megastructure. House price imbalances across central Scotland mean that large family homes of 4 bedrooms and above are available for occupancy in Cumbernauld at prices and rents often half that of equivalent or less salubrious dwellings in the nearby centres of Glasgow and Stirling.
Cumbernauld, or more specifically the suburb Abronhill, was the location for the film Gregory's Girl and its sequel, Gregory's Two Girls.
Cumbernauld is twinned with the town of Bron, France. The local football teams are Clyde, based at Broadwood Stadium and Cumbernauld United, based at Guy's Meadow. The local rugby team is Cumbernauld RFC. There has been a gymnastics team, Cumbernauld Gymnastics Club, in the town for many years, and in the early 90s it moved into its present base at Broadwood Gymnastics Academy, a purpose built building at the same site as Broadwood Stadium.
There is a minor airfield located in Cumbernauld (EGPG). It is used primarily for pilot training by a company based at the airfield. On 21 December 2005 a helicopter flying from the airfield crashed near Perthshire. The chopper was bound for a heliport in Aberdeen. The cause of the crash is still a mystery.
Banton; Castlecary; Croy; Dullatur; Kelvinhead; Kilsyth.
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