It is easy to fall into the trap of deploring the loss of old buildings.
I know I am one of them. I am able to see merit in even the most humble of properties which I reason with a bit of loving care and attention could be fit again for purpose.
Of course the reality is that many were pretty much past their sell by date within years of being constructed, usually because they were made of the cheapest materials, and were not well maintained.
Others, just got in the way of some shiny new development which saw no merit in a row of Georgian cottages, replacing them with a “dark satanic mill” which in turn fell victim to the clearance plans of the mid 20th century, which ushered a range of properties now also long since gone.
All of which brings me to a set of pictures from Andy Robertson.
On Tuesday, while the sun still cracked the paving stones, he was out behind Chester Road and took a series of pictures which he accompanied with the comment,
“It looks as though the buildings on the land enclosed by Virgil St, Cornbrook Park Road, Princess Street and Chester Road are about to be demolished!”
And I think he is right.
I wondered how long they had been up.
The OS map of 1893 shows them fitting the footprint and the 1911 directory has our building listed as Henry Moors Printer while his neighbour was Thomas T R Thorpe wheelwright, which seems appropriate because the last business to inhabit the space was Victoria, Services which was involved in car valeting and body repairs.
Andy not only captured the buildings in their final state but also got a glimpse of the inside, which included the discarded bits of the business no one wanted.
And these pictures I find the most fascinating reminding me almost of an industrial version of the Marie Celeste with everything just left on the day the employees walked away.
Location; Princess Street, Cornbrook
Pictures; almost gone, 2018 from the collection of Andy Robertson
I know I am one of them. I am able to see merit in even the most humble of properties which I reason with a bit of loving care and attention could be fit again for purpose.
Of course the reality is that many were pretty much past their sell by date within years of being constructed, usually because they were made of the cheapest materials, and were not well maintained.
Others, just got in the way of some shiny new development which saw no merit in a row of Georgian cottages, replacing them with a “dark satanic mill” which in turn fell victim to the clearance plans of the mid 20th century, which ushered a range of properties now also long since gone.
All of which brings me to a set of pictures from Andy Robertson.
On Tuesday, while the sun still cracked the paving stones, he was out behind Chester Road and took a series of pictures which he accompanied with the comment,
“It looks as though the buildings on the land enclosed by Virgil St, Cornbrook Park Road, Princess Street and Chester Road are about to be demolished!”
And I think he is right.
I wondered how long they had been up.
The OS map of 1893 shows them fitting the footprint and the 1911 directory has our building listed as Henry Moors Printer while his neighbour was Thomas T R Thorpe wheelwright, which seems appropriate because the last business to inhabit the space was Victoria, Services which was involved in car valeting and body repairs.
Andy not only captured the buildings in their final state but also got a glimpse of the inside, which included the discarded bits of the business no one wanted.
And these pictures I find the most fascinating reminding me almost of an industrial version of the Marie Celeste with everything just left on the day the employees walked away.
Location; Princess Street, Cornbrook
Pictures; almost gone, 2018 from the collection of Andy Robertson
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