Victoria Works, Birmingham

The Victoria Works is a Grade II listed building in the Jewellery Quarter of Birmingham, England.[1] It was built in 1839–40 for Joseph Gillott, who manufactured pen nibs, and was one of the first purpose-built factories in the Jewellery Quarter. It is situated opposite the Argent Centre, another building constructed for industrial use around the same period. The factory was one of the largest of its kind, with nearly 600 workers. Steam engines of 60 horsepower powered the mass production of the nibs.

Victoria Works
Albert, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII, and Princess Alexandra visiting the works in 1874

Current use

The Victoria Works was renovated in the early 1990s and houses a mixture of different companies and residents.

English Heritage blue plaque on the Graham Street frontage
gollark: Suuuure.
gollark: Arguably quite a lot are. Depending on things, you may end up suffering more overhead trying to split up work, merge your parts back together, maintain multiple copies of things, communicate, and that sort of thing, than you would just doing all of it yoursel.
gollark: Nobody knows. It's just abstract philosophy right now.
gollark: Use an existing image editor and screen sharing thing at the same time?
gollark: Given that nobody is really sure how consciousness works (or, well, lots of people seem to be sure, but they disagree with each other and there isn't really empirical evidence).

References

Further reading


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.