About
Located in the historic Pumphouse at Queen's Dock on the Clyde, the Morrison family's return to Glasgow distilling. Major visitor experience destination.
Production Details
The Clydeside Distillery Tale
Where the River Clyde bends through Glasgow's heart, the old Queen's Dock Pumphouse stands transformed. Its Victorian bones, once built to serve the great ships that made Glasgow's fortune, now house copper stills that catch the morning light off the water. In 2017, the Morrison family brought whisky-making back to Scotland's largest city, claiming a piece of industrial heritage for an older craft.
The building itself tells Glasgow's story—red sandstone walls that have watched cargo ships give way to pleasure craft, cranes replaced by gleaming visitor galleries. Brian Morrison chose this spot not for tradition but for transformation, understanding that great whisky often rises from unlikely ground. The Lowlands have always been Scotland's most accessible region, where gentle hills meet urban energy, and here that spirit finds its purest expression.
Loch Katrine water travels thirty miles from the Trossachs to fill these vessels, the same Highland source that has sustained Glasgow for generations. It arrives soft and clean, carrying mountain memory into the city's embrace. The water speaks of Scotland's ancient compact—Highland purity flowing to Lowland purpose, wilderness serving civilization.
Inside the converted pumphouse, the stills work with quiet efficiency. Each piece of copper equipment represents a deliberate choice: how to honor whisky's fundamentals while writing Glasgow's new chapter. The Morrison family, with generations of spirits knowledge behind them, understood that returning whisky to Glasgow meant more than installing equipment in historic walls. It meant proving that Scotland's whisky regions could expand, that tradition could take root in unexpected soil.
Visitors gather at the windows overlooking the Clyde, watching river traffic while whisky takes shape behind them. The distillery has become what its founders intended—a bridge between Glasgow's industrial past and its cultural future, where the city's relationship with Scotland's national spirit finds new expression.
The spirit resting in casks nearby carries Glasgow's DNA: ambitious, welcoming, unafraid of reinvention. As the city continues evolving around it, Clydeside writes the opening chapters of what urban Scottish whisky might become.