Curved Railway Warehouse (B&W) - Oldham - April 2010

Derelict Places

Help Support Derelict Places:

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

MCRShadow

Active member
Joined
Jun 11, 2010
Messages
27
Reaction score
31
Location
Ashton, Manchester
Visited with Ojay

Probably not the most exciting of explores, I did however find my myself pleasantly fascinated with the curviture of the building and the inability to access the upper floors.

Brief History

"The Park Road, or more correctly Clegg Street, Railway Warehouse at Oldham was built in 1876 and although it often know as the London & North Western Railway warehouse it was actually built by the Oldham, Ashton & Guide Bridge Railway which was jointly owned by the London & North Western and the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway (later the Great Central Railway). It was last used in the 1960s and since then has stood empty and becoming increasingly derelict. It owes its survival to the fact of being listed grade 2 on the basis of its unusual curved layout. Over the years there have been many proposals for the re-use of this building but none have succeeded. The building is now owned by the Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council who are prepared to give it to a developer. Another redevelopment plan was announced recently, involving a hotel, office and retail development (Oldham Evening Chronicle, 20 May 2004) and it is felt that if the current scheme fails then it may have to be demolished on account of its condition. But although it was listed because it was unusual, one could now argue that its listing status is further justified on the basis that it is one of the very few surviving Victorian railway warehouses in the region. There are some survivors of course, the Liverpool Road and the Great Northern warehouses in Manchester and the Heaton Norris warehouse in Stockport, but large numbers have been demolished. There were other warehouses in Oldham which have all gone as have those at Shaw and Royton. Similarly warehouses have been demolished in Rochdale, Bury and Bolton. Many of these were built for the use of the cotton trade and one small warehouse survives at New Hey station labelled "Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Cotton Warehouse"

1.
DSC_0444.jpg


2.
DSC_0442.jpg


3.
DSC_0443.jpg


4.
DSC_0387.jpg


5.
DSC_0393.jpg


6.
DSC_0402.jpg


7.
DSC_0415.jpg


8.
DSC_0419.jpg


9.
DSC_0430.jpg


10. Cool skull that I found.
DSC_0437.jpg


11. TEETH!
DSC_0438.jpg


12.
DSC_0439.jpg


13.
DSC_0440.jpg


14. Round the back now...
DSC_0455.jpg


15.
DSC_0459.jpg


16.
DSC_0463.jpg


17.
DSC_0467.jpg


18.
DSC_0468.jpg


Overall an interesting one, easy for anyone who wants to give it a go.

Demolition is a possibility but if anybody gets upstairs, +1 to you.

Cheers!

HS
 
there is an old lnwr goods shed still in use further over past mumps station that is still in use it is opposite the sorting office dont know what it is still in use for but it was abuilding firm at one point + there is the lnwr warehouse at millbrook mossley thats slowly disintergrating
 

Latest posts

Back
Top