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#21
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In message , Marratxi
writes Sorry, you'll find a picture at http://mysite.freeserve.com/MajorcaR...s/detail4a.jpg which will show where I was when I took the photo (red blob) and the direction I was facing. Does this do the trick ? Yep - the place you have marked is precisely at the foot of the exit tunnel from the hotel. -- Paul Terry |
#22
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![]() "Paul Terry" wrote in message ... In message , Marratxi writes Sorry, you'll find a picture at http://mysite.freeserve.com/MajorcaR...s/detail4a.jpg which will show where I was when I took the photo (red blob) and the direction I was facing. Does this do the trick ? Yep - the place you have marked is precisely at the foot of the exit tunnel from the hotel. -- Paul Terry Why does a hotel need an exit tunnel and why is it so big ? Cheerz, Baz |
#23
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![]() "Paul Terry" wrote in message ... In message ilgate.org, Troy Steadman writes Ha ha that's very funny! What about the two tunnels - not the blue ones in the security guard's arm but the black ones in the wall beyond the fence? They're the exits from Burton's beer cellar (below the station) out to Midland Road. Paul Terry Problem solved - from the horse's mouth:- "It is not a tunnel but a vault. As you will be aware, the station was built above ground with the undercroft used for storage of beer from Burton on Trent. The undercroft under the Barlow trainshed was built of wrought iron spanning on cast iron columns between brick arched side walls. That is the wall in the background of your photos. The ground to the west was mostly earth fill but to the north were a series of arches rather like a viaduct running east west from the undercroft - originally these were coal drops. The arch that you have photographed actually forms the basement to the original parcels offices on the west side which were located just north of the cab road and booking hall. There were a series of interlinked vaults under the parcels offices and you can just see the remains of the east-west vaults behind the cut back mouth of the main vault. The south end of the main vault terminated in the east-west dray road which accessed the main undercroft. This has now been demolished back to the north end of the cab road." Thanks to you all for your help, Baz |
#24
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In message , Marratxi
writes Why does a hotel need an exit tunnel and why is it so big ? It was the main exit from the station as well as the hotel (it is part of the roadway goes right past the famous booking hall). I was about to write that, despite all this, I don't think this is your tunnel (it is slightly too far west) when I saw your latest post. The explanation that it is a vault under the parcels office ties up with the plan of the station given in London's Termini. -- Paul Terry |
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