IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
The Sidings, LOUTH, LN11 0PX

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to The Sidings, LN11 0PX by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (130 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Louth Station
The GNR East Lincolnshire line opened in 1848 and closed in 1970, built in 1854, the station is a grand red brick Neo-Jacobean building with arcaded porte-cochere. Now converted into flats and surrounded by modern housing.
Image: © Richard Croft Taken: 7 Mar 2006
0.02 miles
2
Cut Mark: Louth Railway Station
Cut mark on the south-east end of Louth station building, now turned into apartments. See http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5721298 for a wider view and http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm94050 for details of the mark.
Image: © Brian Westlake Taken: 15 Mar 2018
0.03 miles
3
Louth Railway Station
There is a cut mark on the south-east end of Louth station building, now turned into apartments. See http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5721295 for a closer view and http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm94050 for details of the mark.
Image: © Brian Westlake Taken: 15 Mar 2018
0.03 miles
4
From Morrison's to Aldi and down the main street in Louth aerial 2018
Image: © Chris Taken: 13 Mar 2018
0.04 miles
5
No trains here anymore
The Old Railway Station the last passenger train departed way back in 1970. Open for freight for another ten years before the railway was closed for ever. Now the station buildings have been converted into flats and the railway yard and land have new dwellings on them making it very hard to imagine that trains ever ran here.
Image: © roger geach Taken: 14 Oct 2011
0.05 miles
6
Aldi comes to town: site of former Louth Maltings, aerial 2015 (2)
See Image for previous picture and Image for history of the site and links to earlier stages of this project.
Image: © Chris Taken: 23 Jul 2015
0.05 miles
7
Goodbye to the Maltings - and welcome back to Louth Station
First glimpse of Louth Station from Newbridge Hill for 65 years! See also aerial shot Image Pity about the new housing in front of the station, though I do not know what was there before. ABM Malt Kiln, a slightly less charismatic landmark than St. James' Church on the Louth horizon, has finally met its match and is being dismantled literally step by step, with the lowest section reduced to piles of mangled concrete and reinforcing rods. It is well past its sell-by date, and Aldi are planning to do everyone a favour by building a supermarket in its place. It has put up the good fight, and a demolition squad who moved in in about 2003 withdrew, seemingly with their tails between their legs, for the building remained intact, complete with its treasure trove of asbestos and its thick reinforced concrete walls. However it is not without its own fascinating and very impressive history. Construction began in 1949 and replaced the old maltings, which were built around 1870 and destroyed by German bombs in 1940. The new site had to be where its predecessor stood to qualify for war compensation. It took two years to finish the project, with post-war cement rationing slowing down the process. The production section was finished for malting to begin in 1952. The interior was an extraordinary honeycomb of 96 eight foot square, 90ft high storage chambers for barley and malt. Dalgety's took over ABM in 1972 then Paul's Malt in 1987. Their plans to expand production by building three huge new silos were refused in 1989 by East Lindsey District Council and on appeal, following bitter opposition from the Civic Trust and conservation minded councillors. Louth was producing 30,000 tonnes a year. In the late 1990s Paul's invested £30,000,000 in a new plant at Bury St Edmunds which increased production by 100,000 tonnes. Read more, and photos: http://www.midlandsheritage.co.uk/industrial/4541-abm-paul-maltings-louth.html#ixzz3GVZyJ87w Residents of housing developments in close proximity will be relieved that, finally, they will no longer be looking out at a vast and overbearing concrete wall. See also Image], Image] and Image For aerial shot of the Maltings and station see Image History of station, see: http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/l/louth/index.shtml Aerial shot showing pre-war maltings and station: http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/epw031927
Image: © Chris Taken: 18 Oct 2014
0.05 miles
8
Louth: Goodbye to the Maltings
ABM Malt Kiln, a slightly less charismatic landmark than St. James' Church on the Louth horizon, has finally met its match and is being dismantled literally step by step, with the lowest section reduced to piles of mangled concrete and reinforcing rods. It is well past its sell-by date, and Aldi are planning to do everyone a favour by building a supermarket in its place. It has put up the good fight, and a demolition squad who moved in in about 2003 withdrew, seemingly with their tails between their legs, for the building remained intact, complete with its treasure trove of asbestos and its thick reinforced concrete walls. However it is not without its own fascinating and very impressive history. Construction began in 1949 and replaced the old maltings, which were built around 1870 and destroyed by German bombs in 1940. The new site had to be where its predecessor stood to qualify for war compensation. It took two years to finish the project, with post-war cement rationing slowing down the process. The production section was finished for malting to begin in 1952. The interior was an extraordinary honeycomb of 96 eight foot square, 90ft high storage chambers for barley and malt. Dalgety's took over ABM in 1972 then Paul's Malt in 1987. Their plans to expand production by building three huge new silos were refused in 1989 by East Lindsey District Council and on appeal, following bitter opposition from the Civic Trust and conservation minded councillors. Louth was producing 30,000 tonnes a year. In the late 1990s Paul's invested £30,000,000 in a new plant at Bury St Edmunds which increased production by 100,000 tonnes. Read more, and photos: http://www.midlandsheritage.co.uk/industrial/4541-abm-paul-maltings-louth.html#ixzz3GVZyJ87w Residents of housing developments in close proximity will be relieved that, finally, they will no longer be looking out at a vast and overbearing concrete wall. See also Image], Image] and ImageFor aerial shot of the Maltings and housing see Image History of station, see: http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/l/louth/index.shtml Aerial shot showing pre-war maltings and station: http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/epw031927
Image: © Chris Taken: 18 Oct 2014
0.05 miles
9
The arrival of Aldi in Louth: aerial 2015
Finally Aldi is open, said to be the biggest of its UK stores. It has attracted much interest and enthusiasm, leading to complaints by some that it is "only a supermarket". But we must never forget what stood there before. The story has been charted at length in this square - see Image
Image: © Chris Taken: 27 Dec 2015
0.05 miles
10
Louth: Goodbye to the Maltings
ABM Malt Kiln, a slightly less charismatic landmark than St. James' Church on the Louth horizon, has finally met its match and is being dismantled literally step by step, with the lowest section reduced to piles of mangled concrete and reinforcing rods. It is well past its sell-by date, and Aldi are planning to do everyone a favour by building a supermarket in its place. It has put up the good fight, and a demolition squad who moved in in about 2003 withdrew, seemingly with their tails between their legs, for the building remained intact, complete with its treasure trove of asbestos and its thick reinforced concrete walls. However it is not without its own fascinating and very impressive history. Construction began in 1949 and replaced the old maltings, which were built around 1870 and destroyed by German bombs in 1940. The new site had to be where its predecessor stood to qualify for war compensation. It took two years to finish the project, with post-war cement rationing slowing down the process. The production section was finished for malting to begin in 1952. The interior was an extraordinary honeycomb of 96 eight foot square, 90ft high storage chambers for barley and malt. Dalgety's took over ABM in 1972 then Paul's Malt in 1987. Their plans to expand production by building three huge new silos were refused in 1989 by East Lindsey District Council and on appeal, following bitter opposition from the Civic Trust and conservation minded councillors. Louth was producing 30,000 tonnes a year. In the late 1990s Paul's invested £30,000,000 in a new plant at Bury St Edmunds which increased production by 100,000 tonnes. Read more, and photos: http://www.midlandsheritage.co.uk/industrial/4541-abm-paul-maltings-louth.html#ixzz3GVZyJ87w Residents of housing developments in close proximity will be relieved that, finally, they will no longer be looking out at a vast and overbearing concrete wall. See also Image], Image] and Image For aerial shot of the Maltings and housing see Image
Image: © Chris Taken: 18 Oct 2014
0.05 miles
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