I love doing meter reading work (sometimes ) it gets me to places I wouldn't usually go to.
I spotted the boards, from the end of a long road, which as it happens, I had to go down anyway. It's got houses/flats along most of the front and down most of one side and backs onto the canal. So with it being daytime and the road was pretty busy and some people walking along the canal exterior pics only this time.
A bit more of a recce and a night visit is probably in order and may be more successful.
Bit of info after a bash on google.
Not 100% sure when the site was last operational or what it was last used for.
I wasn't expecting to see any places worthy of pictures so only had my phone with me.
I spotted the boards, from the end of a long road, which as it happens, I had to go down anyway. It's got houses/flats along most of the front and down most of one side and backs onto the canal. So with it being daytime and the road was pretty busy and some people walking along the canal exterior pics only this time.
A bit more of a recce and a night visit is probably in order and may be more successful.
Bit of info after a bash on google.
Britannia Mills
Built in 1906 by William Wallis, later to become William Wallis and Sons they continued until the mid 1930s in Britannia Mills, Bennett Street. Enoch, one of the brothers, became Managing Director of the Britannia Mills factory until he started his own lace business in Nottingham just before the first world war. He continued to live in Long Eaton and was both a JP and an Alderman of the Derbyshire County Council.
Not 100% sure when the site was last operational or what it was last used for.
I wasn't expecting to see any places worthy of pictures so only had my phone with me.