Fire engulfs one of world's top art schools in Glasgow again after 4 yrs
Restoration project, set to cost between EUR 20 mn and EUR 35 mn, was returning the institution to former glory following fire in 2014.
Glasgow: Fire devastated one of the world's top art schools once again on Saturday, destroying four years of restoration work after a previous blaze ripped through the historic Glasgow School of Art.
The famed Mackintosh Building in Scotland's biggest city has been "extensively damaged", fire chiefs said.
A restoration project, set to cost between £20 million and £35 million ($26.5 million and $46.5 million; 23 and 40 million euros), had been returning the world-renowned institution to its former glory following a fire in 2014.
But much of that work has been wrecked, firefighters confirmed, after rushing to tackle the inferno which broke out at around 11:20 pm (2220 GMT) on Friday.
No casualties were reported.
"This is a devastating loss for Glasgow," deputy assistant chief fire officer Peter Heath told a press conference.
He said firefighters who had battled to save one of Britain's most cherished buildings four years ago were distraught to be back at the scene after it went up in flames again.
"The fire has had a good grip of this building and it's extensively damaged it, but the emotional attachment -- there is a sense of loss not just amongst the firefighters but I am sure the citizens of Glasgow."
Asked if any of the restoration work had been destroyed, Heath replied: "Given the extent of the fire, that would be a fair comment."
The inferno has been largely contained after 120 firefighters tackled the blaze.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said it had been a "devastating blaze, much, much worse than the one that took hold of the Mackintosh Building four years ago so the damage is severe and extensive."
She said her administration would do anything it reasonably could to help ensure that the building had a future, but added: "It's too early to say what that might entail or what that might look like. We don't know yet what the structural condition of the building is."
Local residents were evacuated from their homes with the glow from the blaze visible across the city centre.
The fire affected all floors of the art school and spread to a nearby campus and a nightclub.
Alan Dunlop, professor of architecture at the art school, said the situation was "horrible".
"The building does look as though from the inside it's been totally gutted. All that seems to remain is the stone walls on the outside," he said.
Britain's Scotland Secretary David Mundell said he was at the school only a fortnight ago to see the restoration work.
He said the government "stands ready to help, financially or otherwise".
Protected landmark
The previous blaze was in May 2014, badly damaging the building designed by the architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
A Glasgow-born architect and designer, Mackintosh (1868-1928) was a leading exponent of Art Nouveau, whose distinctive lines and lettering remain influential.
He won a competition to design the building in 1897 and it took around 10 years to complete. It is now a landmark in the city with special government-protected status.
The school's alumni include recent Turner Prize for art winners Simon Starling (2005), Richard Wright (2009) and Martin Boyce (2011).
Others include "Doctor Who" actor Peter Capaldi, Harry Potter and James Bond movie actor Robbie Coltrane, and members from the Scottish rock bands Travis and Franz Ferdinand.
"Can't believe what's happening to the art school. Terrible," said Franz Ferdinand frontman Alex Kapranos.
The 2014 blaze began when a projector ignited gases from expanding foam used in a student project, a fire investigation found.