View allAll Photos Tagged Warehouse

In Victorian times, Shad Thames included the largest warehouse complex in London. Completed in 1873, the warehouses housed huge quantities of tea, coffee, spices and other commodities, which were unloaded and loaded onto river boats.

 

During the 20th century the area went into decline as congestion and containerization forced shipping to unload goods further east, and the last warehouses closed in 1972.

 

Many artists lived in the area in the 1970s (presumably due to the low cost of living there), reportedly including David Hockney and Derek Jarman.

 

Shad Thames was regenerated in the 1980s and 1990s, when the disused but picturesque warehouses throughout the area were converted into expensive flats, many with restaurants, bars, shops, etc. on the ground floor.

 

(Source: Wikipedia)

 

Realengracht

Amsterdam

 

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Warwick Bar Conservation Area covers an area of 16.2 hectares (40 acres) where the Birmingham-to-London Grand Union Canal meets the Digbeth Branch Canal.[1] It was designated such status on 25 June 1987.[2] It covers the entire length of the Digbeth Branch Canal through the Eastside area and a section of the River Rea. To the south is the Digbeth, Deritend and Bordesley High Streets Conservation Area.[1]

The conservation area includes three of the statutorily listed buildings in Birmingham, each built by the canal company in the 1840s and 1850s, and a locally listed canal warehouse built in 1935. In total, there are five listed buildings and six locally listed buildings.[1] One locally listed building, the former Co-op furniture factory works (1899) on Belmont Row was destroyed by fire on 11 January 2007 in a suspected arson attack. Seventy-five percent of the building was damaged by a fire which caused the roof to collapse and which also destroyed seven arched windows.[3] On 18 January 2007, the façade of the building, which had survived the fire albeit smoke damaged, collapsed in on itself in high winds owing to the lack of support it received after the fire had been put out. This building had been due to be redeveloped as part of the Ventureast regeneration project

 

My Texture

See last photo for description.

The Wandrahmsfleet at the historical "Warehouse District", Hamburg, Germany.

Keep all your sights on

Hey the black cat changing colors

And you can walk under ladders

And swim as the tide choose to turn you

Every unit around this building is drab, so clearly someone had decided to be different. Taken on a Nikon F3 and Kodak ColorPlus 200

Photo of a recently finished warehouse, on the north side of Houston Texas. I drive by it coming home from work. There has been a lot of new construction in the area, over the last couple of years. Photo was taken with a Canon 80D, with an EF-S 18-135mm lens, with adjustments made during post-processing.

This view with these two sides of the building in full light was not possible until the warehouse to the right of the frame burned down just a couple of days ago. This one is mostly abandoned. A part of the lower level may be in use for something. Thanks for looking.

These are (I think) some of the old warehouses which formed part of the Nottingham London Road train station. The main station building is now a gym, the sign for that is visible in the foreground of this.

 

This is a follow up shot to my earlier post which featured the current train station on Carrington Road in Nottingham.

 

Photo taken from my bicycle on a lunchtime meander.

 

Cosmic Symbol camera

Kentmere 100 film

 

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This is where junk gets stored.

Ok, this is how weird I am. I woke up Monday morning from a dream in which I posted THIS pic. I took it specifically for a group challenge (warehouse 13) but didn't get around to posting it in time. It took over an hour to find and almost made me late to work. No idea why this popped in my head, but when the subconscious speaks, I listen so here it is.......

Nottingham Canal, UK.

Connecticut Southern train CSO-4 crosses the Warehouse Point Railroad Bridge with two former LMX B39-8s, the leader is still wearing the LMX paint.

One of three bonded warehouses, built in the thirties, currently being demolished in Nottingham; they were used to store tobacco.

© All rights reserved.

Tonight's dusk (in my village of Shardlow) on this venerable old canal side warehouse dating from 1760 and now in its latest iteration as a pub. PS Formula food but done well.

Portion of a loading dock on a new warehouse. Shot in Melrose Park Illinois.

Seyðisfjörður Industriegebiet

25 variations of an industrial warehouse made with the AI text-to-image software "Midjourney". Style = "covered by overgrown forest".

Looking in the windows of a modern warehouse office at night. Shot in Cicero Illinois

Pan Am Railways' Plainville, CT turn jobs EDPL and its' counterpart PLED were tough to get, as they were mostly a night time operation. During the summer of 2015, early morning northbound runs on the Springfield Line were becoming common. On this clear July 24, 2015 PLED had a pair of CT assigned EMD GP40's 350-352 leading the way, shown here crossing the Connecticut River at Warehouse point, just north of Windsor Locks, CT.

Dogpatch warehouse

A night view of the beautifully restored Warehouse Store facade on Wellington West that is integrated with BCE place. Built in the Second Empire style, the Warehouse Store is one of a dozen historically important merchant buildings from the mid 19th century that survived the Great Fire of 1904. Spencer R. HIggins provided heritage consultation for Bregman & Hamann Architects in the BCE redevelopment project completed in 1992.

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