1
Agriculture House, Newtown
Grade II listed five storey and attic red brick building. Built 1895 as a factory for Pryce Jones on the site of an earlier one. Served as Admiralty victualling station during World War II. Taken over by the Agricultural Executive Committee and later ADAS.
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 4 Jul 2024
0.02 miles
2
Agriculture House, Newtown
Viewed across Old Kerry Road. Built in 1895 as a factory for Pryce-Jones near the Pryce-Jones Royal Welsh Warehouse. http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2810148 The building has had several later uses, such as an Admiralty victualling station during the Second World War and as offices for the Agricultural Executive Committee.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 23 Jun 2013
0.02 miles
3
Royal Welsh Warehouse viewed from Barn Lane
The two large Victorian buildings in the centre of the photo are Agricultural House http://www.coflein.gov.uk/en/site/32018/details/AGRICULTURE+HOUSE%3BPRYCE+JONES+FACTORY/ and the Royal Welsh Warehouse http://www.coflein.gov.uk/en/site/32049/details/ROYAL+WELSH+WAREHOUSE%2C+OLD+KERRY+ROAD%2C+NEWTOWN%3BPRYCE+JONES+WAREHOUSE%2C+OLD+KERRY+ROAD%2C+NEWTOWN/ , both were built for the Pryce Jones mail-order business in the 19th century and are sited very close to the railway station.
Behind these buildings lies the 1970s built 'new town' of Treowen. Between the Royal Welsh Warehouse and the camera is the McDonald's Restaurant and drive-thru (with pyramidal roof) which stands close to the River Severn on the site of a large laundry. There is a glimpse of the river to the right and the Cambrian Bridge stretches across it just in front of McDonald's.
Image: © Penny Mayes
Taken: 25 Dec 2015
0.03 miles
4
Royal Welsh Warehouse viewed from Barn Lane
The two large Victorian buildings in the centre of the photo are Agricultural House http://www.coflein.gov.uk/en/site/32018/details/AGRICULTURE+HOUSE%3BPRYCE+JONES+FACTORY/ and the Royal Welsh Warehouse http://www.coflein.gov.uk/en/site/32049/details/ROYAL+WELSH+WAREHOUSE%2C+OLD+KERRY+ROAD%2C+NEWTOWN%3BPRYCE+JONES+WAREHOUSE%2C+OLD+KERRY+ROAD%2C+NEWTOWN/ , both were built for the Pryce Jones mail-order business in the 19th century and are sited very close to the railway station.
Behind these buildings lies part of the 1970s built 'new town' of Treowen. Between the Royal Welsh Warehouse and the camera is the McDonald's Restaurant and drive-thru (with pyramidal roof) which stands close to the River Severn on the site of a large laundry. The Cambrian Bridge stretches across the river just in front of McDonald's.
Image: © Penny Mayes
Taken: 25 Dec 2015
0.03 miles
5
Railway Tavern, Newtown
Pub in Old Kerry Road, about 100 metres from the town's railway station.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 23 Jun 2013
0.03 miles
6
The Royal Welsh Warehouse
With the snowy Kerry hills in the background.
Image: © Penny Mayes
Taken: 28 Nov 2010
0.03 miles
7
A Pryce-Jones building in Newtown
The date of this edifice is 1895 and it marks the high water mark maybe of the Pryce-Jones mail order company when his mail order operation spanned the globe and was set fair for the coming decades, until maybe the Great War and its foul aftermath.
Mid Wales did not boast many six-storey buildings in 1895 or buildings that would not look out of place in Cardiff or Swansea in that year, but this is one, and it is just one of a cluster of massive redbrick corporate statements housing what must surely have been the town's largest single employer in 1895.
Today there seems to be a gym in there along with a bowling operation and who knows what.
Image: © Jeremy Bolwell
Taken: 18 Feb 2012
0.04 miles
8
Brimmon Lane, Newtown
This is the northern end of the lane which leads to Treowen Primary School.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 23 Jun 2013
0.04 miles
9
Former Newtown Factory
One of the many former factories that make up the history of Newtown
Image: © Harry Hayfield
Taken: 26 Aug 2006
0.04 miles
10
Royal Welsh Warehouse, Newtown
Built in 1879 by David Walker for Pryce Jones, a local man, who had founded the world's first mail order business in 1859. The building was added to in stages. Both the outside and interior have a wealth of detail commemorating Queen Victoria and Pryce-Jones' success at exhibitions in Philadelphia in 1896 and Vienna in 1873.
For more on the history of the business see http://a-day-in-the-life.powys.org.uk/eng/home/eo_pryce.php .
The building currently houses a £ Stretcher, carpet retailer, hairdresser and café.
Image: © Penny Mayes
Taken: 17 Jan 2008
0.04 miles