Spillers Mill Car Park

Tyne Mill is one of a trio of mills designed by Oscar Faber for Spillers Ltd – the others are in Cardiff and Avonmouth and led to subsequent commissions from the company. Spillers began with a single mill in Bridgwater in around 1833, and during the 20th centruy had mills all over Britain.

Spillers operations were flour milling and manufacturing animal feeds, and they came to Newcastle in 1896. Grinding grain to flour produces both heat and fine dust a combination guaranteed to be a fire hazard. The fire retardant properties of reinforced concrete, and its relative cost effectiveness, made it a popular choice for mills and other industrial buildings.

Construction took place during the winter and a warming plant heated the concrete constituents before and after mixing, to control the setting time which governs how soon the slip-form shuttering can be moved to the next lift. The concrete was usually kept at 15.6 deg C, though this could be varied to speed or delay setting times.

The mill building has the actual mill above a warehouse area. Its footprint is 88.4m by 27.4m with 12 storeys and a maximum height of 51.2m. It has reinforced concrete columns and beams, but timber floors of 100mm thick Columbian pine with a 25mm thick maple strip finish. The walls are of 280mm thick brickwork with flashing on each floor to drain the cavity.

When completed, Spillers Tyne Mill was the largest flour mill in Europe and apparently the tallest milling building in the world. It could process 254,000 tonnes of grain annually, brought to the mill by ship via Spillers Quay or by rail on the track extension along Quayside.

28 Days Later

A goods line down to the Newcastle quayside from Manors Station was agreed in 1845, but not authorized until 28th June 1863 and opened on 1st June 1870.  

The Quayside Branch Line closed on 16 June 1969. The railway was in use for ninety-nine years and its eventual demise reflects the changes in the Quayside and Ouseburn themselves from shipping and industrial use to one now of housing and leisure facilities. The northern portal of tunnel 2 was removed when the Metro system was constructed in the late 1970s. The cutting above Lime Street was filled in in 1977 and the tunnel at the quayside bricked up and landscaped over in the 1990s. Only the Red Barns tunnel remains as a metro overrun facility. 

Ouseburn Trust

Demolition began in June 2011 and was completed by January 2012.

Newcastle Photos

All that remains is a car park:

24/7, completely free and always spaces! A hidden parking gem of Newcastle! 10 minute walk to Millennium Bridge. Security is almost non-existent but busy enough that trouble should be deterred.

Parkopedia

However:

A popular Newcastle car park will be staying locked up overnight in an effort to crack down on boy racers. Council bosses have confirmed plans to permanently close the Spillers car park in Ouseburn at 10pm each night after it was plagued with – significant anti-social behaviour.

Chronicle Live

The future of the car park is uncertain, with major redevelopment plans having emerged for the area.

While planning permission has expired for the controversial Whey Aye Wheel project, which would have seen Europe’s biggest observation wheel built at Spillers Wharf, there remain proposals to build housing on the riverside plot.

ITVX

However as of September 2023 a car park is a car park – a car park with embedded remnants of the railway yard, interspersed with rapidly emergent plant life, and crumbling concrete obstacles.

Along with a discarded packet of Wotsits.

The ingredients list of Wotsits Cheese reveals that cheese and dairy-derived components play a significant role in creating the mouthwatering flavor. The primary ingredients include corn and rapeseed oil, which form the base of the crunchy corn puffs. However, it is the cheese flavoring that truly brings the cheesy goodness to Wotsits cheese.

Whitley Lodge Estate

I have previously walked along the Whitley Bay promenade the better to see Beacon House.

Where a two bed flat will set you back £179,000.

This time around I came to views the surrounding housing on Whitley Lodge Estate.

A mix of 1960s flat-roofed brick low rise, maisonettes and terraces with mathematical tiles, linked by concrete roads. Each home with its distinctive modifications, which express a longing for the comfort of a past which reaches back further than the 1960s.

We live in a land of Victorian carriage lamps, wishing wells and faux Georgian doors and door knockers.

Along with replacement windows, multiple cars and the over-cladding of cladding.

Whitley Lodge consists of a housing estate, the Whitley Lodge Shopping Centre – classified as a District Centre in planning terms and Whitley Lodge First School. The school is home to the Whitley Lodge Baptist Church which was established in 2007.

At the centre of Whitley Lodge is its shopping centre, which includes a snooker club, post office, estate agency, newsagent, soft play area, cafe, barber shop, fitness centre, Italian restaurant Davanti, the Kittiwake pub, Contour Blinds – window blind, shutter, awning and curtain specialists and a Tesco Express. The centre is also home to various takeaway establishments, including Tandoori Take Away, New Claremont Chinese takeaway, Dimitri Takeaway, and a Fish and Chip Shop.

I am oh so fond of 60s seaside estates, having visited Penrhyn Bay again and again

Let’s take a look around.

Launderette – Craig y Don

21 Clarence Rd Llandudno LL30 1TA

Only takes 20p 50p £1 £2 and no change machine. No detergent either so plan on getting some at the store nearby first. No WiFi, four dryers and five washing machines, one of which, doesn’t work.

The only good thing about it is that it’s open on Sundays.

CJ – local guide

Brilliant dryers and not too expensive, I had to laugh at the review saying – no WiFi.

Debbie Dent

This wash and wear love could hang you out to dry.

Lynn Varnado

Returning to a favourite photographic topic, whilst strolling around Llandudno on a wet and windy day.

Seeking solace in the warm and soapy world of the empty launderette.

A somewhat austere interior, with primly printed posters on the plain cream, wood panelled walls.

Penrhyn Again

Another year on, another day in Penrhyn Bay – fifth time around.

I have to admit that I’m fascinated by the manicured homes of this long sweep of road reaching from the base of the Little Orme.

It was fascination, I know
And it might have ended right then, at the start
Just a passing glance, just a brief romance
And I might have gone on my way, empty hearted

Nat King Cole

Once a scattered agglomeration of inter-war houses in the shadow of the limestone quarry.

On each visit one apprehends the ever so slowly evolving additions, carefully considered property improvements, another new car in the same old town.

Keeping it quietly personal.