Greenesfield Locomotive Works, and Gateshead engine shed was one of the sheds which provided express engines for the East Coast Main Line. They were built for the North Eastern Railway, which was formed in 1854. Greenesfield Works was originally built as the Tyneside terminus for the main line from York and the south. Trains had to terminate there until the High Level Bridge was opened in 1849 when trains were able to bypass Gateshead station and travel straight across to Newcastle.
The redundant station-building was extended and converted to be an engine-building works. It was the NER's main engine-building works, and was used to build most of its larger engines. The site eventually proved too cramped, and all engine building was moved to the Darlington works in 1910. Greenesfield works continued to do repairs till 1932, and again from World War II till its final closure in 1959.
The last occupant of the building was Cardinal Triumph Suppliers. This company appears to have been a specialist Triumph car tuner and disappeared in about 1991 - the building has sat empty ever since.
Belway Homes have also used the site to store materials as they converted the rest of the buildings in Ochre Yard into flats. Seems we have the credit crunch to thank for keeping this one untouched for a little longer as Belway Homes look to have abandoned the site for the time being.
A reader of this site, Ian Hall, sent in this additional info about the place.
I can confirm that indeed there was a company called cardinal triumph at the greensfield site in Gateshead, they mostly restored triumph stags (they were never tuners), my friend worked there for quite a few years in the 80's and I used to go there often and marvel at the cars they turned out, real 100 point concours show cars. As to the development by Bellways, my friend said he'll never buy one of those apartments because of the amount of paint and chemical thinners they dumped under the floors!, he reckoned there must've been 10,000 gallons over the years.
11th May 2009
External Photos.
Top Floor.
Lower Floor.
More Information:
- Pictures of Gateshead - Greenesfield Railway Works
- Wikipedia - Gateshead TMD
- Sitelines - Gateshead, Greenesfield Locomotive Works
- Sitelines - Gateshead, Greenesfield Railway Works, parapet wall
- Historic England - The Former Boiler Shop Of Greensfield Railway Works
- Grace's Guide - Gateshead Works
- 28 Days Later - Greenesfield Works
- Skyscraper City - Ochre Yards Housing Development (former Greenesfield Railway Depot)
- Co-Curate - Gateshead TMD
- Disused Stations - Gateshead West
My Other Abandoned Photos:
- St Mary's Asylum, Stannington - Abandoned
- J&W Lowry - Abandoned Shopfitters - Abandoned
- AP Appledore Shipyard - Abandoned
- Associated Lead Factory - Abandoned
- Cherry Knowle Hospital (Sunderland Borough Asylum) - Abandoned
- Hunters Moor Hospital - Abandoned
- Ponteland R.O.C. (Royal Observer Corps) - Abandoned
- Abandoned Farm in Wylam
- Swan Hunters Shipyards - Abandoned
Greenesfield Sheds
ReplyDeleteIn the photographs it shows one of the original buildings still left standing, in the first photo taken from Rabbit Banks Road you will notice that it has a lower story which was acessed from the aforementioned road,. when steam days ended at Gateshead this was leased off to private business and in the mid 60s to Potter Cowan Ltd, which is now part of the Crossling group to store metal tubes, cast valves etc all big stuff. When we first surveyed it for this possible use it was still full of redundant railway sundries from the steam age like oil cans of various shapes and sizes, oil pouring containers, wire brushes of various sizes, the type for cleaning out loco tubes, paraffin containers, tender coal shovels and irons,drums of various greases, triple aspect oil signal lamps, one of which I still have,its stamped B.R. not L.N.E.R. and a cornucopia of other items, large nuts & bolts, large cottar pins, and various steam fittings, also a used 52A cast shed plate which I also still have, it must have been the stores in steam days as most of the stuff was brand new but of no further use,It all ended up at the tip.
looks like in Bellways site plan there is no future for this building, and maybe they are leaving it to rot so they can eventually demolish it so they can see through their plans for this site!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bellway.co.uk/new-homes/north-east/ochre-yards#getMapDirections
Your probably right, a real shame.
ReplyDelete