Accrington Culvertry, Lancashire – August 2013

Derelict Places

Help Support Derelict Places:

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

Gone85

Active member
Joined
Jan 5, 2010
Messages
30
Reaction score
107

A former superpower in the cotton and textile industry, Accrington is a fairly sleepy old place, the years go by nori brick by nori brick.


5/6 years ago Accers was hit by a couple of draining wizards, covering everything from the Warmden Brook to the River Hyndburn. It has been addressed in such UE manners ~ Here, Here & Here.


All shot on Kodak Colourplus 200 through my CM4, shouts to NickUK for the f70 the first time we went and for hitting these up with me!


The first on our agenda, the Hall of Giants. I think its name spanning from the 12x18ft NORI brick outfall, the waterfall infall, the hall like opening inside and the giant rock outcrops peeping from the water.


8930118285_b9f87fea4f_o.jpg


8930726916_b632478536_o.jpg


8930730506_462eb8c414_o.jpg


8930119941_c600df61e3_o.jpg



Next on the list was Superlative Nomenclature, found by LittleMike some time ago. This weird little culvert reminds me of platforms at a train station and depending on your route under you’ll encounter rusted iron braces holding the sides up.


Here the Warmden Brook joins the Woodnook brook/water to form the Hyndburn. Well at least I think it does.


8930729026_c14cf7ac14_o.jpg


8930116381_03a91d1fd1_o.jpg


8930730054_5f4b38c3cf_o.jpg


8930725386_3229c0e912_o.jpg



And the last stop, the ‘Warmden Grotto’. This little peach features a large waterfall, sitting at about 15ft in size with many smaller 3/4ft waterfalls onroute. The culvert is fairly divided, featuring RBP, arch style drainage ranging in size along with many small sidepipes and runoffs.


8930122057_d784d852c4_o.jpg


8930115547_255f7d38ba_o.jpg


8930114115_d1759fed97_o.jpg


8930115457_2a5e6302e9_o.jpg


8930788988_4f2116c41b_o.jpg



Cheers for looking, G.​
 

Latest posts

Back
Top