real time web analytics
Report - - British Arkady, Manchester - April 2016 | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - British Arkady, Manchester - April 2016

Hide this ad by donating or subscribing !

BrainL

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
The Explore
Reminded in me some ways of Fletchers paper mill although on a slightly smaller scale.. labs upstairs were certainly a highlight with some lovely decay setting in!

The site is still very much live in parts however, the ground floor had lots of people about and in some places having to avoid rooms with workers. Managed to stay undetected and enjoyed the explore :)

The History
Augustus Muir in his "History of Baker Perkins" states – "Some experiments, carried out at Willesden by Hinman Baker, son of W. King Baker, resulted in the discovery of a combination of chemicals that enhanced the action of yeast in bread. To market this 'bread-improver', the British Arkady Company Ltd. was formed, and the firm retained a financial interest in it until the time came when the directors decided that its products were outside their traditional range, and they sold the holding to the Ward Baking Company of America".

Baker Perkins Annual Reports begin to mention British Arkady in 1923 – "The British Arkady Company Ltd. in which your Company has a substantial holding …". Adequate dividends appear to have been received from the company's shareholding throughout. In 1935, the "company extended its works" and in 1936 "a new mill for soya bean flour was put into operation".

Baker Perkins' shareholding was finally disposed of in 1953 for a sum "which exceeded the cost to the company by £113,338".

The Website of Bakemark, UK (Arkady/Craigmillar until 2004) gives the following account of its development:

The Ward Baking Co. of New York who owned a chain of bakeries throughout the United States couldn't understand why the bread they made was different in every town. The Mellon Institute of Industrial Research was sponsored by Ward to identify the reason why. This work revealed that the mineral salt content of the local waters was causing the variation and by creating a mixture of these minerals an improvement and standardisation of the bread could be achieved. The Mellon's director of research at the time was Dr Robert Kennedy Duncan -RKD- Arkady, and so a name and product was born.

25853501584_5d25b129ea_b.jpg


26458379395_1582097c52_b.jpg


26185525930_c9cd7f54c3_b.jpg


26366060422_1cb44f68f1_b.jpg


26392213501_16b76fc3df_b.jpg


25853497834_001a169a7d_b.jpg


26432448266_74c4e6a506_b.jpg


26432445976_e3264fca98_b.jpg


26392207741_363caf3d2d_b.jpg


25853493924_23dd652b64_b.jpg


25853492954_29414b0faa_b.jpg


26185516120_d8c6f13e56_b.jpg
 
Last edited:

BrainL

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member

None of these ones are HDR, I never upload HDR shots to here, I know better than that... you'll notice on these most of the windows are blown out which wouldn't be the case if I'd used HDR for them... few of them look a bit strange because of the morning sun coming into the building casting a strange colour on the room which I'm not experienced enough to know how to edit that back to looking natural just yet sorry
 

host

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Nice work mate, still looks the same as when we went, i don't know why this place isn't done more it has a lot to offer...
 

clebby

( . Y . )
Regular User
None of these ones are HDR, I never upload HDR shots to here, I know better than that... you'll notice on these most of the windows are blown out which wouldn't be the case if I'd used HDR for them... few of them look a bit strange because of the morning sun coming into the building casting a strange colour on the room which I'm not experienced enough to know how to edit that back to looking natural just yet sorry

Mate I personally don't mind the pictures but there's no way that these are 'as shot', they might not be HDR but they've definitely got some sort of dodgy filter on them.
 

BrainL

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Mate I personally don't mind the pictures but there's no way that these are 'as shot', they might not be HDR but they've definitely got some sort of dodgy filter on them.

Why would I lie mate... I'm no expert in editing so have I tried my best to sort out the unusual light that was coming into the place... sometimes I don't know why I bother with this forum.. I always thought it was an UE forum and not a photography forum !
 

BrainL

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
They look they have been quite heavily edited but if you say they're SOOC then fair enough

They have been edited but not HDR or filters, just don't know enough to get the strange tones off them, they looked way worse straight from the camera.. believe it was down the white balance but just couldn't get it right, sure I'll learn in future how to sort things like that out
 
Top