real time web analytics
Report - - Stewartby brick works Bedfordshire 25/01/2020 | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Stewartby brick works Bedfordshire 25/01/2020

Hide this ad by donating or subscribing !

explorationnoob

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Stewartby Brickworks 2nd visit after our first visit got cut short, but a massive place we spent a good 3 hours looking around.I know someone that worked here back in the 80s and said it was a great place to work really loud in the sheds but it was great here is some wiki info as I'm useless for history on places.

Originally two Wootton farming settlements, Wootton Pillinge and neighbouring Wootton Broadmead, the Wootton Pillinge LBC village was in 1936 renamed Stewartby, taking its new name from the Stewart family, directors of London Brick Company since 1900. The family's son Sir Malcolm Stewart had amalgamated LBC with the Forders Company in the village in the 1920s. The site closed in 2008 as the owners, Hanson, could not meet UK limits for sulphur dioxide emissions. The four chimneys remaining were due to be demolished upon closure but these have since been listed for preservation of Bedfordshire's brick-related history and will remain.
The brickworks was home to the world’s biggest kiln and produced 18 million bricks at the height of production.BJ Forder & Son opened the first brickworks in Wootton Pillinge in 1897.Wootton Pillinge was renamed Stewartby in 1937 in recognition of the Stewart family who had been instrumental in developing the brickworks.The firm became London Brick Company and Forders Limited in 1926, and shortened to London Brick Company in 1936.At the height of the industry’s production there were 167 brick chimneys in the Marston Vale. There are four chimneys in Stewartby.In the 1970s Bedfordshire produced 20% of England’s bricks.At its peak London Brick Company had its own ambulance and fire crews, a horticultural department and a photographic department, as well as its own swimming pool inside the factory, and ran a number of sports clubs.More than £1 million was spent on Stewartby Brickworks in 2005-7 in an attempt to reduce sulphur dioxide emissions.The factory used Lower Oxford Clay, which is made up of 5% seaweed, formed 150 million years ago when it was on the sea bed. This removed the need to add coal to the fire, as the organic material burned.

IMG_4848.jpg


IMG_4810.jpg


IMG_4853.jpg


IMG_4795.jpg


IMG_4820.jpg


IMG_4803.jpg


IMG_4805.jpg


IMG_4806.jpg


IMG_4814.jpg


IMG_4826.jpg


IMG_4834.jpg


IMG_4831.jpg


IMG_4842.jpg
 

explorationnoob

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
For some reason the files from my huawei phone won't upload as they are to large but the dslr ones have.
 

Who has read this thread (Total: 172) View details

Top