Topic categories:
(Alphabetical)

Courtaulds

You need to be signed in to respond to this topic

First pagePrevious page

Displaying 91 to 105 of 173 posts

Page 7 of 12

1 2 3 4 5 . 7 8 9 10 11 12
Next pageLast page
173 posts:
Order:   

morgana
the secret garden
91 of 173  Fri 16th Jan 2015 12:05pm  

Are you amongst any of these photos Philip? 700 new homes plan for former Courtaulds site in Foleshill
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
morgana
the secret garden
92 of 173  Mon 20th Jul 2015 1:37pm  

Courtaulds Viscose Rayon Plant 1939-45
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
93 of 173  Wed 19th Aug 2015 8:25am  

Hi all Wave Demolition work underway at Courtaulds factory site in Foleshill This reminds me of an episode of "Some Mothers Do Ave Em' Hey, that was my office for many years. Oh my
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Norman Conquest
Allesley
94 of 173  Wed 19th Aug 2015 9:56am  

Not much left of what once was a proud industrial city.
Just old and knackered

Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Gib
Coventry
95 of 173  Fri 11th Sep 2015 4:15pm  

On 2nd Dec 2011 11:21pm, PhiliPamInCoventry said:
On 2nd Dec 2011 12:01am, NeilsYard said: That is a whopper! Whereabouts was it - and when did it (presumably) go?
Hello. The base of the chimney is still intact & was the subject of a preservation order. It can be seen from either near to the Stag pub or from Kingfield Rd. Wave Thumbs up This is the copied google street view from Kingfield Rd. If you go on street view to Kingfield Rd close to Pridmore Rd junc, you can see it on street view. Wave This is a pic of a pic off my pc. That is the base of the original chimney still a few feet up. Cheers This is a quote from Wiki. In July 1905, Courtaulds Ltd opened its factory in Foleshill and grew to become a world leader in the production of artificial fibres requiring a considerable expansion of the facility over the following years. The now-demolished Courtaulds chimney was reputed to be the tallest in England when it was erected in 1924. It stood 365 feet (111 m) tall, was built on 15 feet (4.5 m) - deep foundations, had a base diameter of 26 feet (8 m) tapering to 16 feet (5 m) at the top, and consisted of 917,000 bricks weighing a total of 4,000 tons (4,064 metric tons). Tower Court, formerly one of the Courtaulds buildings, is now used as offices. What I do know is that of the three chimneys on the Great Heath site, two the tall one & the boiler house one were quite close together. Looking at Google from above, I can't be a hundred percent certain which actually is the base of the 365' chimney as there are two circle structures from the air either of which could be the chimney. The demolition was undertaken brick by brick, so I might need help to identify whether what we can see from Kingfield Rd, is the former boiler house chimney or the 'stink', or tall one. ps, They were both tall. Oh my HELP???????????????????????????
Ok, I think this may be wrong? The bigger of the two chimneys is not the one described in the article. The tall one was near Pridmore Road to the left of the original gatehouse. I worked in main works for several years and saw inside the chimney stack around 1983. The chimney in the picture is indeed near Amtico but was a good 80 ft smaller than the Pridmore road site chimney. I saw the big chimney being maintained in about 1980. Fred Dibnah type steeple jacks were there for a good couple of months. The old picture is probably taken from where the new houses were build in the 1990s. (Off Guild Road and Pridmore Road. I remember the old school as I walked past it when I went to Mattersons to get supplies. Not been on that estate for many years but I'm sure there must be an old map showing the road where the pic was taken from. The main works site had Courtaulds Grafil, Courlose, Amtico factory 1 and Main works maintenance workshops/ stores. There was an underground network where industrial pipers were accessible. The pump house next to the canal Next to Courlose was a cooling tower and pool. Courtaulds Grafil had 2 factories for Carbon Fibre production. Factory 1 was linked to Amtico which backed on to Kingfield Road. Factory 2 linked next to SAF which was set back off the Foleshill Rd. Behind the main clock tower/ directors offices and over a two way road to Grafil and SAF. Enterprise House is the old Telephone exchange. I worked for Courtaulds for 14 years in total. Lockhurst Lane, Courtaulds Engineering, Amtico, Courtaulds Grafil, Main works, Courtaulds Rearch were all well known to me. I regularly went over the Pridmore Road Bridge to Courtauld Research workshops and also the research buildings. I worked on the snatch land rovers over the Engineering side in the early 90's, Amtico from about 94-99.
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Gib
Coventry
96 of 173  Fri 11th Sep 2015 4:47pm  

Link 1 Where the old pridmore road gatehouse was. So the big chimney was a where the Toolstation carpark is now. +/-15 yards Link 2 Edited by Midland Red, 11th Sep 2015 4:55 pm (Links clarified)
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Midland Red

97 of 173  Fri 11th Sep 2015 4:48pm  

Gib - it may be possible that you haven't read the complete thread, as around post no.62 what you state above regarding the chimneys is, I think, confirmed Thumbs up
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
98 of 173  Sun 11th Oct 2015 1:08pm  

Hi all Wave A few photos of Courtaulds
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Midland Red

99 of 173  Sun 11th Oct 2015 2:18pm  

Thanks Philip Cheers - pity Trinity Mirror couldn't get the captions correct Oh my
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
dutchman
Spon End
100 of 173  Sun 11th Oct 2015 2:23pm  

Indeed! The television aerials in the rooftop picture suggest it was taken in 1963 rather than 1973: "View of the factory above the Coventry rooftops in June 1973"
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Dougie
101 of 173  Sun 11th Oct 2015 4:19pm  
Off-topic / chat  

bohica
coventry
102 of 173  Sun 11th Oct 2015 5:12pm  

Those Telegraph pictures are surely the plant that was further down the Foleshill Road aren't they? I don't ever remember a tunnel over the road at Little Heath.
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
103 of 173  Mon 12th Oct 2015 7:21am  

Hi & thank you both, Wave Newspapers are going through hard times & cannot afford highly skilled journalists these days. Just by reading current news events shows a lack of basic geography, misquoting districts & so on. Sad, Sad as in the past our own local newspaper was generally very reliable for reporting facts. A bit like banks these days too, where your are lucky to find a qualified accountant on site! PS. On the subject of mistakes of news reporting, Sky news has today described the recent bus tragedy, in which two people died, stated that the accident took place in Leamington. So much for accurate reporting! Sad
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
104 of 173  Sun 10th Jul 2016 10:36am  

Courtaulds, Little Heath, behind the Wheatsheaf, had a greenhouse-looking building inside the factory, inside the glasshouse were upright pipes that sprayed water through small screwed-in spray filters that damped down the acetate air, every so often the house was shut down. The operator climbed in, replaced blocked filters, the bucket of blocked filters were then cleaned by a fluid and brushing. Once the operator dropped by accident a whole packet of Wrigleys Spearmint into the fluid, the following day the factory had a pleasant smell of spearmint in the air, the workers didn't mind but management wasn't pleased.
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
105 of 173  Tue 23rd Aug 2016 4:09pm  

Hi all Wave Just one picture for now. The windows on the first floor at various points in time, were occupied as follows. Over the entrance door was the personnel manager Mr. K Reynolds Next right. Mr T Frazer MD, later became office to Manufacturing Director Mr R Knibbs 2nd right. Mr A Bensley Co Secretary, became Mr J Prance 3rd right Secretaries which later became the office of the Finance Director, Mr G F Thomas 4th right Mr H Branton Manufacturing Director 1960s 5th right Mr H Branton The ground floor Next to entrance door on right. Reception 2nd Post Room 3rd Finance that housed me, until I was shoved next to the car-park. 4th Finance 5th Finance & Cash Office The visible added top floor, housed the architects. That was headed up latterly by Director Mr J Harvey. The offices to the left of the entrance door (out of site from picture) were the various design offices. Although they changed over the years they were at some point, Ground floor Electrical & general services. 1st floor Celon design 2nd floor Instrumentation 3rd floor Plant In addition, further design offices were located behind the main building, as well as production engineers, plastics & joinery, & the Spinnerette production department. What ever criticisms some may have had about policies & so on, my hard experience with the company was that those who I mention were all hard grafters. My knowledge of these company folk, along with so many more, was as a result of me always after signatures, or attending meetings of one sort or another. Over three hundred people were employed here by CEL or Courtaulds Engineering Ltd to give it its correct name in 1965ish. It was a wholly owned subsidiary of Courtaulds Ltd, later Plc. Web-site Current site, still in business. In Partnership, current.
Industry, Business and Work - Courtaulds

You need to be signed in to respond to this topic

First pagePrevious page

Displaying 91 to 105 of 173 posts

Page 7 of 12

1 2 3 4 5 . 7 8 9 10 11 12
Next pageLast page

Previous (older) topic

Fish and Chip shops
|

Next (newer) topic

What would attract visitors to our city long term?
You are currently viewing topics in All categories
View topics only in the Industry, Business and Work category
 
Home | Forum index | Forum stats | Forum help | Log out | About me
Top of the page

This is your first visit to my website today, thank you!

3,295,690

Website & counter by Rob Orland © 2024

Load time: 73ms