I stopped off here on the way through Llangollen because it looked vaguely warehouse-like, albeit rather wrecked.
History abridged from https://cadw.gov.wales/sites/default/files/2019-05/Llangollen- Understanding Urban Character_0.pdf:
It was “the Pen y Bryn Brewery from around 1840. It operated under various guises until the 1870s when it became known as Tanqueray’s Llangollen Brewery.
It was the major brewery in the town until its closure in the 1930s.….Today, the redundant buildings of the Llangollen Brewery are the main surviving remains of this industry”.
The building has since been used for light-industrial (packaging) and office purposes, and there was nothing much inside except junk - all sorts of stuff, including what looked like contents of somebody’s house.
Pictures go from roadside level, which would probably have been stables and loading bays, up to the top.
History abridged from https://cadw.gov.wales/sites/default/files/2019-05/Llangollen- Understanding Urban Character_0.pdf:
It was “the Pen y Bryn Brewery from around 1840. It operated under various guises until the 1870s when it became known as Tanqueray’s Llangollen Brewery.
It was the major brewery in the town until its closure in the 1930s.….Today, the redundant buildings of the Llangollen Brewery are the main surviving remains of this industry”.
The building has since been used for light-industrial (packaging) and office purposes, and there was nothing much inside except junk - all sorts of stuff, including what looked like contents of somebody’s house.
Pictures go from roadside level, which would probably have been stables and loading bays, up to the top.