Glasgow Central Station and a street alongside it are to fully reopen on July 17 following a fire that badly damaged a building in the area in March.
Part of Union Street and some entrances to the station have been closed since then as stabilisation work was carried out.
The fire began in a vape shop on Union Street on Sunday March 8, before spreading through the building and around the corner, leading to the structure collapsing.
Only the facade of the B-listed Victorian building at the junction with Gordon Street was left standing, but it was later demolished due to safety fears.
Glasgow Central Station and a street alongside it are to fully reopen on July 17 following a fire that badly damaged a building in the area in March.
Part of Union Street and some entrances to the station have been closed since then as stabilisation work was carried out.
The fire began in a vape shop on Union Street on Sunday March 8, before spreading through the building and around the corner, leading to the structure collapsing.
The fire broke out Sunday afternoon in a vape shop on Union Street, next to the station. Flames engulfed the building, filling the frames of windows and shooting from the dome-capped roof.
Most of the building, which dates to 1851, collapsed as it burned through the night, leaving only the facade standing.
Paul Sweeney, a member of the Scottish Parliament, likened it to the remains left after the Nazi bombing of Britain in 1940-41.