photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Type your message and click Add Comment
It is best to login or register first but you may post as a guest.
Enter an optional name and contact email address. Name
Name Email
help private comment
Jakob Ehrensvärd | profile | all galleries >> Industries of the past >> Another abandoned brick works tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

Another abandoned brick works

This is really a relic from an entirely different era. The all-wooden building is in a very late stage of decay and one can really wonder for how long time it has been abandoned and how long time it will take before it all collapses into a giant pile of rubble. A not too advanced guess is that it closed around 1960 or so, after a few years of falling output. Presumably the old-fashioned setup made it hopelessly non-competitive as brand-new oil-fired brick works with a high level of automation went into operation during the 1950s.

The story of these old abandoned plants is more or less the same. The post-WWII era simply eradicated the foundation for labor intensive business as wages followed the overall increase in living standards. Facing a society with full-employment, the new urban rock n' roll generation was simply not interested in following their grand parents footsteps into the darkness and poor conditions of these old industries. A rapidly sinking relative productivity, an aging workforce, overall increased costs and a fiercer competition became a lethal combination of factors and in the twenty-year period between 1955 and 1975, a massive onslaught killed most of these industries. Another important factor was the industrialization of house building with centralized planning and usage of prefabricated structures. Hand-made production meant less consistent output and quality which was okay when buildings were also hand-made. Skilled eyes could then sort and adjust the result to take this into account, whereas the new high productivity customers required perfect consistency and exact dimensions. A bit off topic, but one can wonder if that has anything to do with the fact that old brick structures are so much more appealing than new ones... ?

The few that eventually survived this period typically died in the following ten year period when energy prices soared and recession marked the end of the post-WWII growth era.

Interesting and thoughtful, I think...
.
IMG_2639.jpg IMG_2641.jpg BF5T1096.jpg BF5T1081.jpg
BF5T1120.jpg IMG_2644.jpg IMG_2643.jpg IMG_2650.jpg
BF5T1082.jpg BF5T1123.jpg IMG_2684.jpg BF5T1110.jpg
IMG_2657.jpg IMG_2690.jpg IMG_2717.jpg IMG_2665.jpg
IMG_2685.jpg IMG_2689.jpg IMG_2701.jpg BF5T1131.jpg
IMG_2678.jpg IMG_2645.jpg IMG_2671.jpg IMG_2669.jpg
BF5T1105.jpg BF5T1102.jpg IMG_2699.jpg IMG_2672.jpg
IMG_2673.jpg BF5T1107.jpg IMG_2675.jpg BF5T1135.jpg