On Belville Street at Ratho Street, which is on the right. Tenements with front gardens are very uncommon in the west of Scotland.
The Category A Listed crane was built during WWI and dominates the scene from Ratho Street railway bridge.
Between Belville Street and Ratho Street. Allegedly where the name of Greenock Morton FC originates.
Looking up the hill from the A8 East Hamilton Street. The flats are at Kincaid Court, which was built on the site of John G Kincaid's marine engineering works, which made ship engines as big as a house until closure in the 1990s.
At the bridge over the Glasgow to Gourock railway line at Cartsdyke Station.
The huge scale of the crane is best appreciated from this vantage point.
Looking towards Morton Terrace.
In a small park at the east end of the street, near Grant Street.
Viewed along Belville Street. The crane is at James Watt Dock.
Belville Street is in the foreground. St Laurence's RC Church is on the B788 Kilmacolm Road.
Red sandstone tenements, survivors of the 1941 Greenock Blitz, at the junction with Belville Avenue. The crane in the distance is at James Watt Dock.
Owing to its close proximity to the shipyards and several railway lines, much of the street was destroyed during the Greenock Blitz in 1941. These buildings must have appeared futuristic when they were built.
Three of the remaining towerblocks, all of which are scheduled for demolition. Viewed from the A8 Rue End Street at Victoria Harbour.