97 Buchanan Street, Glasgow City Centre G1 3HF | |
01412045242 | |
Willow Tea Rooms Website | |
Follow willowtearooms on Twitter | |
Facebook information can be found here | |
Follow willowtearooms on Instagram | |
Owned by Anne Mulhern for over 30 years, the Willow Tea Rooms are very much part of the history of Glasgow, a go to place for many people, where our visitors enjoy seeing some of the recreated features from the partnership of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Kate Cranston in the early 1900s.
Situated in the heart of Glasgow’s style mile, The Willow Tea Rooms at 97 Buchanan Street, are a recreation of the White Dining Room and Chinese Room, which were originally part of the Ingram Street Tea Rooms. The use of colour has probably never been more evident than in the contrast in these two rooms.
At our Tea Rooms, you can enjoy breakfast, lunch, morning coffee or afternoon tea – the choice is yours – all available all day. For that special day-out or celebration, Champagne Afternoon Tea is the perfect choice.
Steeped in culture and heritage, The Glasgow Art Club has been a meeting place for generations of the city’s most innovative and creative inhabitants.
READ MOREDesigned by famous Scottish architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh, House for an Art Lover is a truly unique venue and one of Glasgow's architectural gems!
READ MOREThe Hunterian is Scotland's oldest public museum and home to over a million magnificent items ranging from meteorites to mummies and Mackintosh!
READ MOREKelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum is one of both Glasgow's and Scotland's most popular free attractions boasting an extensive collection of over 8000 objects displayed across 22 themed galleries!
READ MOREMackintosh at the Willow includes a 200 seat restaurant in the A listed, internationally recognised, original Willow Tea Rooms Building and our new Visitor Centre next door!
READ MOREMackintosh Queen's Cross is one of Glasgow's hidden architectural gems. The only church in the world designed by the great Scottish architect, designer and artist, Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
READ MOREScotland Street School Museum was designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh and offers a fascinating glimpse into schooldays of the past.
READ MOREMackintosh's 'masterwork' The Glasgow School of Art, built 1897-1909, bookends his architectural career.
READ MOREHigh on a hill in Helensburgh, overlooking the River Clyde, sits what is universally regarded as Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s finest domestic creation!
READ MOREThe Lighthouse, Scotland's Centre for Design and Architecture, is a visitor centre, exhibition space and events venue situated in the heart of Glasgow, just off the Style Mile.
READ MOREHave fun discovering Glasgow on this award-winning, quirky, self-guided, heritage walk with a treasure hunt theme from Curious About!
READ MOREGlasgow Women's Library is no ordinary library! We are the only resource of its kind in Scotland and a true national treasure.
READ MORELying just a few miles from the centre of Glasgow, Holmwood House has been described as Alexander 'Greek' Thomson's finest domestic design!
READ MOREClyde Docks Preservation Initiative operate a series of guided walking tours of Glasgow's waterfront, exploring the maritime history of the river and its modern regeneration.
READ MOREGlasgow City Chambers are one of the most beautiful civic buildings in the UK and a huge favourite amongst locals and tourists alike!
READ MOREThe Glasgow Necropolis is a Victorian cemetery located on a low but very prominent hill to the east of Glasgow Cathedral.
READ MOREGet a sweeping view of the city from the only surviving medieval castle in Glasgow!
READ MORESt Andrew's is the Cathedral Church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Glasgow. Built in 1816, it's seen in a new light since its restoration, completed in April 2011.
READ MOREA grand country house near Glasgow city centre, Pollok House is Scotland’s answer to Downton Abbey and gives a real taste of upstairs/downstairs life in the 1930s!
READ MOREThe award-winning St Mungo Museum is a haven of tranquillity in a bustling city. This museum is named after Glasgow's patron saint, who brought the Christian faith to Scotland in the 6th century.
READ MOREThe Western Necropolis is a large cemetery complex north of Glasgow City Centre.
READ MORETrades House is a charitable trust focusing on the assistance of the needy, encouragement of youth and support for education in the greater Glasgow area.
READ MORE