I'll Miss It
The railway warehouse on Queens Rd had stood empty since Dr Beeching closed the goods yard it served. There had been talk of finding some other use for it- as workshops or a hotel or even a railway museum- but nothing ever happened. I crept inside once with my sister and her future husband (it was very dank and bird-limey) and she took photographs.
Last week we noticed that they'd closed part of the road. On Friday the machines moved in. Now there's nothing there but a fifteen foot mound of rubble.
It had a curved facade (dictated I believe by the shape of the site) which made it one of the more attractive buildings in a town that doesn't have much good architecture.
Last week we noticed that they'd closed part of the road. On Friday the machines moved in. Now there's nothing there but a fifteen foot mound of rubble.
It had a curved facade (dictated I believe by the shape of the site) which made it one of the more attractive buildings in a town that doesn't have much good architecture.
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On the other hand, what does one do with a huge old mill or warehouse? Where is the money for reinvention and restoration going to come from?
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Where there's a will, there's a way...
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(Anonymous) 2012-01-09 06:33 pm (UTC)(link)Hope you and Ailz got my emails to you both.
Jenny x
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Thanks for your emails. Ailz says "sorry" for not replying but she's still fighting a cold and feeling drained and empty. She went to the Doc yesterday and he gave her anti-biotics.
I wish, I wish, I wish, the sun would come out....