A
Angel Maker
Guest
Guest
GKN Shadow Building, Birmingham.
Our first report is of a fairly well known set of buildings in Birmingham that is on it's way to becoming completely demolished. Being new to Urban Exploration, this is the first site we have visited successfully and are looking for other people around the area to help us out in the future, so feel free to send us a message if you are feeling generous.
It took multiple visits for us to explore the whole area and despite falling into a hole in the underground tunnels, everything went smoothly. As well as some interesting industrial sights, rich history and paper work, there was some amazing graffiti to be found inside the area. We are unsure of how much we missed out on due to demolition, but we are happy with what we managed to see and it made us extremely excited for the future.
The history I found has been used by multiple people across different reports and sites, there isn't much that hasn't been said, but it was taken from a British History site that explains in great detail all about the economy of the area.
It took multiple visits for us to explore the whole area and despite falling into a hole in the underground tunnels, everything went smoothly. As well as some interesting industrial sights, rich history and paper work, there was some amazing graffiti to be found inside the area. We are unsure of how much we missed out on due to demolition, but we are happy with what we managed to see and it made us extremely excited for the future.
In 1854 J. S. Nettlefold, a Birmingham screw manufacturer, had revolutionized his industry by introducing automated American machinery. Room was needed to house this; Nettlefold, joined by his brother-in-law Joseph Chamberlain, father of the statesman, established the Heath Street Works in Cranford Street, Smethwick. The firm dominated the market by the mid 1860s. In 1880, the year in which it became a limited company, Nettlefolds took over one of its local rivals, the Birmingham Screw Co. The newly acquired works was almost as large as the Heath Street Works and faced it from the opposite bank of the Birmingham Canal.
By the outbreak of the First World War the new company produced over half the screws and about a quarter of the nuts and bolts made in the country. In the late 1960s the headquarters of Guest, Keen & Nettlefolds Ltd., by then an investment company, adjoined the Heath Street Works, a 50-acre complex run by GKN Screws and Fasteners Ltd. and employing some 4,500 people.
The history I found has been used by multiple people across different reports and sites, there isn't much that hasn't been said, but it was taken from a British History site that explains in great detail all about the economy of the area.