A little building I had been keeping an occasional eye on over the years.
Part of it was used as offices by the galvanising firm next door but the derelict looking boarded section on the left was never accessible.
Then driving by one day I noticed fencing had gone up and went for a quick look.
It was built in 1920 as the admin block for McKechnie who had smelting and copper sulphate works over the road.
The original six bay block was extended sometime in the 1980s with another three bays added on the right in the same style.
The building in its shorter form can be seen in the blowup of the aerial photo below.
Pictures are ordered from the ground floor up - no tripod for this one.
Passing again last weekend I noticed the place has now been flattened, so these pictures may be the only record of the inside.
Widnes is the birthplace of the UK chemical industry, and this was one of the few buildings left from the height of that era.
Apparently there’s a bottle of McKechnie copper sulphate in the Catalyst Museum down the road.
This museum is well worth visiting by the way even if it does come across as a belated apology for turning Widnes and much of the surrounding area into a toxic waste dump.
Part of it was used as offices by the galvanising firm next door but the derelict looking boarded section on the left was never accessible.
Then driving by one day I noticed fencing had gone up and went for a quick look.
It was built in 1920 as the admin block for McKechnie who had smelting and copper sulphate works over the road.
The original six bay block was extended sometime in the 1980s with another three bays added on the right in the same style.
The building in its shorter form can be seen in the blowup of the aerial photo below.
Pictures are ordered from the ground floor up - no tripod for this one.
Passing again last weekend I noticed the place has now been flattened, so these pictures may be the only record of the inside.
Widnes is the birthplace of the UK chemical industry, and this was one of the few buildings left from the height of that era.
Apparently there’s a bottle of McKechnie copper sulphate in the Catalyst Museum down the road.
This museum is well worth visiting by the way even if it does come across as a belated apology for turning Widnes and much of the surrounding area into a toxic waste dump.
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