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Digbeth Cold Storage - 123 - 135 Digbeth : 無料・フリー素材/写真

Digbeth Cold Storage - 123 - 135 Digbeth / ell brown
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Digbeth Cold Storage - 123 - 135 Digbeth

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ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示 2.1
説明This is the Digbeth Cold Storage building at 123 - 135 Digbeth.It is a former Cold Storage building from 1899 by Ernest C Bewlay.It is a Grade II listed building.Ice Factory and Cold Store. Designed in 1899 by Ernest Bewlay for the Linde British Refrigeration Company and completed in 1900, by which time Bewlay had joined Cossins and Peacock of Colmore Row. Red brick with a slate roof. Four storeys and a basement.Exterior: The front to Digbeth Road has a distinct architectural treatment. There are 10 bays: At ground floor level these have semi-circular relieving arches and the 7 bays at left are blind but at right the 3 metal-framed windows have cambered heads. The first floor is blind, but the second and third floor windows are paired and the third floor has lunettes, save to the 2 right-hand bays which are blind. The left flank abuts No. 135 Digbeth. The right flank has 2 shaped gables with a loading bay to the ground floor which has a raised platform and 4 iron columns with bollards. The second and third floors here have a wall arcade but no windows. To the tops of the gables are large circular air inlets. A wall to ground floor level at right has been demolished and the 1937 Goad Insurance plan of the site indicates that this is probably where the boilerhouse chimney once stood. The rear has the boilerhouse at right with arched heads to the metal-framed windows and pilaster buttresses and a louvre to the roof.Interior: the building has a tall ground floor and lesser height to the three upper floors. The loading bay is at the eastern end of the building, giving onto a courtyard which is entered from Digbeth and Orwell Passage. Immediately behind are a staircase and two lifts leading to each floor. The floors are supported by a grid of evenly spaced iron columns with moulded caps supporting steel beams. At each level there are 4 main chambers. These have heavy, insulated doors and the walls and ceiling are lined with wood panelling behind which is cork insulation. There are metal ducts of rectangular section across the ceilings, which are also covered with cork insulation and boxed-in with wood panels. To the top of the building there are replaced fans which circulate cold air. The roof structure has been replaced to the original pattern.Opposite the loading bay, on the other side of a courtyard, is a lower building with shaped gables housing the office, stores and canteen, built in 1920 to designs by Cossins, Peacock and Cooke, which is not included in this item. Former Ice Factory and Cold Store 123-135 Digbeth - British Listed BuildingsA former cold store of 1899 by Ernest C. Bewlay, impressively funcitonal with something of H.H. Richardson's Romanesque in its deeply chamfered paired windows with lunettes above.From Pevsner Architectural Guides: Birmingham by Andy Foster.As of Spring 2011 - work has begun on the Beorma Quarter site. Hennessey's has moved down Allison Street, and the old one is behind hoardings.
撮影日2009-10-10 12:29:11
撮影者ell brown , Birmingham, United Kingdom
タグ
撮影地Birmingham, England, United Kingdom 地図
カメラFinePix S1500 , FUJIFILM
露出0.001 sec (1/1300)
開放F値f/4.0


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