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Report - - Quaker Oats Factory - Southall - September 2019 | Industrial Sites | Page 2 | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Quaker Oats Factory - Southall - September 2019

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DustySensorPhotography

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Nice report, after the first few lines of your write up, I was expecting a lot less. But this has mass appeal, good shots of the conveyor belt with sugar puffs on;) . I like industrial machines new and old. Some solid shots else where too. This will definitely get attention now !

Great report :thumb
Thank you :) It's a really good place to be honest like you said and I'm usually not a massive fan of industrial, but this place is different, plus the non industrial parts as well like the canteen and offices
 

cannyclever

28DL Member
28DL Member
I worked for one shift as a security guy (on relief cover) back in 2000/2001, fascinating place when i walked around inside... It was still fully functioning then, the smell was absolutely awful! They had 'lifts' that took you up through holes in the floors which were basically a belt with little steps on it... You jumped on, held tight and jumped off at the floor you wanted...
 

DustySensorPhotography

28DL Regular User
Regular User
I worked for one shift as a security guy (on relief cover) back in 2000/2001, fascinating place when i walked around inside... It was still fully functioning then, the smell was absolutely awful! They had 'lifts' that took you up through holes in the floors which were basically a belt with little steps on it... You jumped on, held tight and jumped off at the floor you wanted...
That's amazing dude haha thanks for sharing; it reeks there too more than before I'd assume because of the rat droppings littering the floor everywhere! That lift sounds brilliant though haha! Was it a kind of yellow? Because we did actually see that at a couple points
 

AnyWeathersbubble

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Quaker Oats Factory:
This what-seems-to-be-decrepit factory out on the western region of London has a lot more to offer than I initially believed.
The main food made in this establishment was Sugar Puffs; and indeed you can see the omniscient Honey Monster on the highest part of the building looking over the vast stretch of urban sprawl beneath it.
Quaker Oats itself was founded in 1877 but this building itself was built in 1939 and it continued production all the way through to March 2015 when it officially shut it doors (or shutters in this case).

The Explore:
The security were characteristically lousy and didn't pay any attention to us at all, although at one point a car did pull up right by our entry point and I did for a while believe we'd been sealed in; though to my elation we were absolutely fine in the end.
I've been here twice and so the photos are from both trips, but to be honest very little changed at all. As always, the lights are all on which leads me to believe that during the week there is some sort of maintenance work going on inside, though I can't confirm either way.

The main mechanical features we did first where the boxes would have been sealed and then bundled together before being sealed in a shrink wrap.
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Here's where the boxes went into the machine, pre filled with sugar puffs which have since been devoured by the rat population that inhabits the facility rather more than you'd expect...
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This is the machine that transported the boxes along the route to the shrink wrap machine; and you can in fact see some of the shrink wrap still around the assembly line at the back.
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This room here was a control room for a rather barren assembly floor which was probably one of my favourite rooms in the whole site because of the documents left from the company and notes from workers dotted around.
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Though this is definitely one of my worse photos from the site, I did like this floor with all the industrial pipes and such, despite the awfully pungent smell of bird excrement...
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This is the long, empty factory floor I referred to earlier which still isn't that bad as far as factories go, with peeling paint and still a lot of pipe work on the ceiling left.
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Onto my favourite part of the whole building: The Canteen. It's just something about abandoned canteens that really tickles my fancy, accompanied by all the lights on but with some debris scattered elequently around the floor and tables that gives it that abandoned-feel. Anyway: there was nothing of note in the kitchen apart from an industrial cleaner in the pitch dark that wouldn't have been worth the shot anyway; there was a nice supply of Sugar Puffs though which I did try with acquiesce after being pressured into it and regretting it immediately after:banghead
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A nice token to remind everyone that the canteen is in fact shut.
You can see behind the serving hatches and where the canteen feeds onto the rest of the kitchen on the left.
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This room is horrendously asymmetrical which does tempt feelings of emotional decline, but aside from that, the table itself was home to a whole array of leaflets and the like for the Sugar Puffs and other Quaker Oats owned brands, along with the room behind having a full size adult Sugar Puff costume and massive placards for the brand.
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Of course I couldn't go without a display of the amazing view from the roof of the building. Though there may be a rather conspicuous figure obfuscating part of the view, I hope it gives a good idea of the height of this structure alongside the view it gives off, because you can actually see the Shard and Welmbley Stadium from the roof of this place which really was amazing to see.
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Thanks for getting this far, and hope you liked the report!

Awesome to see this done properly after we went and did this hesitantly in 2017, has this site been developed yet? Should really drive past and check
 

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