



A UK charity is planning to bring a former Royal Navy warship from Pakistan to the River Clyde, where it will be preserved as a floating museum and education center. The project aims to celebrate and revive the rich shipbuilding heritage of the Clyde.
The vessel, originally commissioned as HMS Ambuscade in 1975, is an Amazon-class Type 21 frigate built at the Yarrow shipyard in Scotstoun. During its Royal Navy service, Ambuscade served as an electronic warfare picket in the Falklands War and took part in several bombardments of Argentine positions.
After being decommissioned in 1993, the ship was sold to the Pakistan Navy and recommissioned as PNS Tariq. It served actively for almost 30 years before being retired in 2023. Following its decommissioning, the Pakistan government donated the frigate to Clyde Naval Heritage (CNH) to become part of a maritime heritage initiative in Scotland.
CNH has appointed consultancy firm Tricolor Collective as the lead development partner for the project. Tricolor will support the charity in strategic fundraising, business planning, and the next phase of development.
David O’Neill, founder of CNH, previously expressed his desire to bring Ambuscade back to Greenock. He emphasised the importance of preserving the Clyde’s shipbuilding legacy as a symbol of Scottish innovation, craftsmanship, and industrial strength. Tricolor Collective stated that its expertise in transforming heritage ideas into fundable projects would help CNH achieve this vision.
The River Clyde has a long shipbuilding history, producing naval and commercial vessels, including the famous liners Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, and QE2. However, most of these yards no longer exist, leaving only remnants of Scotland’s maritime past.
The project plans to establish the Clyde Historic Dockyard, which will combine heritage exhibitions, naval innovation showcases, community spaces, and educational programs. The floating museum will allow visitors to explore the global maritime history while preserving the legacy of shipbuilding on the Clyde.
The ship is expected to travel 6,000-miles from Karachi to the Clyde later this year. Once docked, Ambuscade/Tariq will serve as the centerpiece for cultural programs and immersive maritime experiences.
This project follows previous efforts by O’Neill to bring historic ships back to Scotland, including the 147-year-old tall ship Falls of the Clyde. That ship, built at the former Russell & Co yard in Port Glasgow in 1878, has been berthed in Honolulu Harbor, Hawaii, since 2008. Plans to return it to Scotland were disrupted after a contract was awarded to remove the vessel, putting the ship at risk of sinking.
CNH hopes to preserve the Clyde’s naval history for future generations while creating a heritage destination that connects local communities to Scotland’s maritime achievements.
Reference: Greenock Telegraph
Source: Maritime Shipping News