B
baalamb
Guest
Guest
Further to this thread, and later this thread, I decided the disused air-raid shelter on Mansfield Road was worth a look in person. Traffic on Mansfield Road just never seems to die down, making getting in a little cheeky, but we managed without incident.
Apparently this was accommodation for 100 people during the war (looks to me like it would hold more). There are still ladies and gents toilet cubicles, and very faded and flaking instructions on lighting the emergency oil lamps. There's a bricked-up emergency exit passage, which from what I gather leads to some disused parts of the old sand mine. Not sure where that would have come out though. I'm guessing it's been blocked by building work now. Just near the entrance theres quite a nice carving saying "T. Holloway 1868". Don't know if that's real or not, but it certainly could be with the age of the place.
It's a big place, with some reasonably high ceilings in places.
You can see flint embedded in the sandstone, and tool marks on the walls and columns.
The roots are creeping through the cracks, and causing occasional cave-ins.
Some of them are quite pretty.
That pallet in all its beuatiful decaying glory.
A closer view of the fantastic fungus.
Strange place for a threatening sign...
Remains of cables and light fittings dangle.
Directly above this mound of earth and rubble, there is a shaft with a manhole at the surface. Whoever's garden it's in obviously didn't want to pay for a skip.
They don't make litter like this any more.
If the decay carries on at the current rate, there'll probably be quite a few more cave-ins with the way the roots are coming in. The ceiling is indeed a little fragile in places. I can see why they stopped public tours.
All in all, a fantastic place, with oodles of history, and a slightly eerie feel.
Apparently this was accommodation for 100 people during the war (looks to me like it would hold more). There are still ladies and gents toilet cubicles, and very faded and flaking instructions on lighting the emergency oil lamps. There's a bricked-up emergency exit passage, which from what I gather leads to some disused parts of the old sand mine. Not sure where that would have come out though. I'm guessing it's been blocked by building work now. Just near the entrance theres quite a nice carving saying "T. Holloway 1868". Don't know if that's real or not, but it certainly could be with the age of the place.
It's a big place, with some reasonably high ceilings in places.
You can see flint embedded in the sandstone, and tool marks on the walls and columns.
The roots are creeping through the cracks, and causing occasional cave-ins.
Some of them are quite pretty.
That pallet in all its beuatiful decaying glory.
A closer view of the fantastic fungus.
Strange place for a threatening sign...
Remains of cables and light fittings dangle.
Directly above this mound of earth and rubble, there is a shaft with a manhole at the surface. Whoever's garden it's in obviously didn't want to pay for a skip.
They don't make litter like this any more.
If the decay carries on at the current rate, there'll probably be quite a few more cave-ins with the way the roots are coming in. The ceiling is indeed a little fragile in places. I can see why they stopped public tours.
All in all, a fantastic place, with oodles of history, and a slightly eerie feel.