Melox Marvels - Pulbis Dog Food
On a wall at South Birmingham College, Digbeth Campus is this old advert for Melox Marvels - Pulbis Dog Food!
This is the Digbeth Campus of South Birmingham College. This section is the Grade II listed 224 - 225 High Street in Digbeth. Now a part of South Birmingham College, Digbeth Campus.
This particular building is 224 - 225 High Street, in Digbeth.
Building dated to circa 1860. Brick-built with stone dressings and a hipped slate roof with elaborate bracketted eaves. It has five storeys with seven bays to the front, an additional bay to the corner and seven bays to the left-hand return in Milk Street. To the ground floor there are, probably original, shopfronts. To the first, second and third floor are sash windows wiwth shoulders and keystones with incised decoration and brick arch soffits. To the third floor there are square sash windows.
Circa 1860. Polychromatic brick with stone dressings; slate roof. Five storeys; 7 bays plus the corner and another 7 bays on the left-hand return in Milk Street. Ground floor with apparently original shop fronts. Panelled pilasters supporting an entablature with boldly bracketed cornice. First, second and third floors with sash windows with shoulders and keystones with incised decoration and elaborately cut brick arch soffits and bold sills. Lavishly bracketted moulded cornice at second floor level. Fourth storey with square sash windows. Elaborate bracketted eaves cornice. The windows mostly blocked up.
224 - 225 High Street, Digbeth - Heritage Gateway
Pevsner describes it as a crusty brick block of shops and warehouse of 1869 by Thomas Fawdry, restored in 2003 as part of a bulky creative arts centre development by Nichol Thomas.
Published in the Birmingham Post on the 3rd of December 2009.
Looking at this here and in the paper, I'm wondering, why are there three doors that lead to no where? Was there a bridge here?
Melox Marvels - Pulbis Dog Food
On a wall at South Birmingham College, Digbeth Campus is this old advert for Melox Marvels - Pulbis Dog Food!
This is the Digbeth Campus of South Birmingham College. This section is the Grade II listed 224 - 225 High Street in Digbeth. Now a part of South Birmingham College, Digbeth Campus.
This particular building is 224 - 225 High Street, in Digbeth.
Building dated to circa 1860. Brick-built with stone dressings and a hipped slate roof with elaborate bracketted eaves. It has five storeys with seven bays to the front, an additional bay to the corner and seven bays to the left-hand return in Milk Street. To the ground floor there are, probably original, shopfronts. To the first, second and third floor are sash windows wiwth shoulders and keystones with incised decoration and brick arch soffits. To the third floor there are square sash windows.
Circa 1860. Polychromatic brick with stone dressings; slate roof. Five storeys; 7 bays plus the corner and another 7 bays on the left-hand return in Milk Street. Ground floor with apparently original shop fronts. Panelled pilasters supporting an entablature with boldly bracketed cornice. First, second and third floors with sash windows with shoulders and keystones with incised decoration and elaborately cut brick arch soffits and bold sills. Lavishly bracketted moulded cornice at second floor level. Fourth storey with square sash windows. Elaborate bracketted eaves cornice. The windows mostly blocked up.
224 - 225 High Street, Digbeth - Heritage Gateway
Pevsner describes it as a crusty brick block of shops and warehouse of 1869 by Thomas Fawdry, restored in 2003 as part of a bulky creative arts centre development by Nichol Thomas.
Published in the Birmingham Post on the 3rd of December 2009.
Looking at this here and in the paper, I'm wondering, why are there three doors that lead to no where? Was there a bridge here?