Jeneric Jane
Well-known member
Went here a couple of days back on a beautiful sunny day, took my other half along as he's getting into photography and thought it would be something different.
This factory produced fertilizer for farms and was opened in 1959. I have no idea when it was closed down but the company went defunct in the mid 90's, but the factory could have been closed in the mid 80's when its fertilizer activities were sold to Norsk Hydro in 1982, who knows.
"At their new factory in Stanford-le-Hope Essex, Fisons Fertilizers Limited began in 1959 the manufacture of ammonium nitrate for use in Fisons compound fertilisers. This salt provides nitrogen, one of the three essential elements of all plant food, in a highly concentrated form, with resultant advantages to the farmer. As a starting material for the manufacture of ammonium nitrate, anhydrous ammonia of high purity (99.9 per cent minimum, with an oil content of 15 p.p.m. maximum) is used, and is purchased from an adjacent plant operated by Shell Chemical Company Ltd at Shell Haven. Here ammonia is made synthetically from the nitrogen of the air and from hydrogen obtained from oil by the Shell gasification process, and is delivered to Fisons by pipeline as a liquid under pressure. The ammonia is stored on the Fison site in a 2,000-ton insulated spherical tank, the largest of its kind in Europe, at 55 p.s.i.g. and 4'C. The raw material is converted by two processes into ammonium nitratefirst, by catalytic oxidation followed by absorption to form nitric acid, and second, by neutralisation of the acid with further ammonia to produce a hot concentrated (88 per cent) solution of ammonium nitrate in water, which is despatched by road and rail to Fisons compounding factories in various parts of the country. We shall be concerned here only with the catalytic process for making nitric acid."
Anyway I should also warn anyone who wishes to visit this place to do so soonish as the diggers are approaching. Also don't visit this place as night as the place is very dangerous most of the place is flooded with water (which may have chemicals in it still, who knows)
Had to half inch a few pictures from another site as we couldn't climb the top of the building to get an overall shot of the place as there were diggers nearby and didn't want to be caught. If the person who took those pictures is a member on here I apologize and hope they don't mind me using a few of their pictures to demonstrate the layout of the place.
I didn't take the first two picture but thought they summed up the site very well.
I think this is the remains of the tank
I think the pipes were used to load the produce onto waiting trains (there are also remains of some train tracks nearby)
Control Room. You really have to watch where you put your feet in this area as there are grates which have been removed. Below is nothing but a flooded room.
Not sure if this was meant to be flooded or not but this is what is below the control rooms floor.
These look like filters to me.
I like seeing nature creeping in
This factory produced fertilizer for farms and was opened in 1959. I have no idea when it was closed down but the company went defunct in the mid 90's, but the factory could have been closed in the mid 80's when its fertilizer activities were sold to Norsk Hydro in 1982, who knows.
"At their new factory in Stanford-le-Hope Essex, Fisons Fertilizers Limited began in 1959 the manufacture of ammonium nitrate for use in Fisons compound fertilisers. This salt provides nitrogen, one of the three essential elements of all plant food, in a highly concentrated form, with resultant advantages to the farmer. As a starting material for the manufacture of ammonium nitrate, anhydrous ammonia of high purity (99.9 per cent minimum, with an oil content of 15 p.p.m. maximum) is used, and is purchased from an adjacent plant operated by Shell Chemical Company Ltd at Shell Haven. Here ammonia is made synthetically from the nitrogen of the air and from hydrogen obtained from oil by the Shell gasification process, and is delivered to Fisons by pipeline as a liquid under pressure. The ammonia is stored on the Fison site in a 2,000-ton insulated spherical tank, the largest of its kind in Europe, at 55 p.s.i.g. and 4'C. The raw material is converted by two processes into ammonium nitratefirst, by catalytic oxidation followed by absorption to form nitric acid, and second, by neutralisation of the acid with further ammonia to produce a hot concentrated (88 per cent) solution of ammonium nitrate in water, which is despatched by road and rail to Fisons compounding factories in various parts of the country. We shall be concerned here only with the catalytic process for making nitric acid."
Anyway I should also warn anyone who wishes to visit this place to do so soonish as the diggers are approaching. Also don't visit this place as night as the place is very dangerous most of the place is flooded with water (which may have chemicals in it still, who knows)
Had to half inch a few pictures from another site as we couldn't climb the top of the building to get an overall shot of the place as there were diggers nearby and didn't want to be caught. If the person who took those pictures is a member on here I apologize and hope they don't mind me using a few of their pictures to demonstrate the layout of the place.
I didn't take the first two picture but thought they summed up the site very well.
I think this is the remains of the tank
I think the pipes were used to load the produce onto waiting trains (there are also remains of some train tracks nearby)
Control Room. You really have to watch where you put your feet in this area as there are grates which have been removed. Below is nothing but a flooded room.
Not sure if this was meant to be flooded or not but this is what is below the control rooms floor.
These look like filters to me.
I like seeing nature creeping in