ICI Nobel Explosives Factory, Ardeer - Apr. 2009

Derelict Places

Help Support Derelict Places:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

BenCooper

Veteran Member
Veteran Member
Joined
Dec 18, 2008
Messages
321
Reaction score
241
The Ardeer peninsula in Ayrshire is basically a gigantic sand dune - it was chosen by Alfred Nobel in 1871 as the site for his British Dynamite Factory because of it's remote location and lots of sand to make protective berms and blast walls. It soon grew into the world's largest explosives factory, making explosives for mining and quarrying, and expanding into other explosives and propellants for both civilian and military uses.

Nobel Explosives became part of ICI (Imperial Chemical Industries) in 1926, but production shifted away and the Ardeer plant diversified into other non-explosive products, and unfortunately these didn't do very well - much of the site is now derelict.

I've visited the southern shore-facing part of Ardeer before, but this visit was to investigate the northern section. First up was an interesting building on the satellite views which I knew from other sites was probably a drum mill for milling explosive powders - after poking about in the dense woodland, I found it:



Inside, a few parts of the mill remain:



Heading North to open ground, and lots of earth-bermed enclosures for storage, mixing and drying - this one with a big compressor in an outside shed:



Next, onto a press house - an earth-buried building for pressing explosive casings, with individual bays separated by blast walls:



Most of the bays have been stripped and burned (probably for decontamination), but one press remains:



Most signs are gone, but a few remain - including one for an explosive skin care regime :)



Inbetween the big linear press houses are some smaller, newer mixing buildings:



Next onto one of the cordite rolling mills - structurally these are similar to the press houses, earth-roofed with a row of bays separated by blast walls:



These look like they were last used in the '40s - no mills remain, but on the walls are loads of old doodles and scribbles left by the workers:



Including this rather odd example:



Some parts are more modern, though - this was last used in the '90s:



One bay had loads of equipment scattered about - oscilloscopes, scales, gas meters, etc:



Heading South a bit, another rolling mill, this time with sand berms not blast walls:



An older part of Ardeer is on the mainland, over a bridge:



This section has been abandoned for decades - though the brick drying houses still stand:



There's lots more from Ardeer (several visits) in my Flickr set...
 
Looks like you had a blast...
What a great explore, all of the buildings look so odd, nice one!
 
Thanks - I really like the drying houses too, such delicate brickwork for an industrial building...
 

Latest posts

Back
Top