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#31
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On 13 Sep, 11:51, "John Rowland"
wrote: Kev wrote: What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. There are numerous food factories in Park Royal. Kodak has a huge factory in Wealdstone. |
#32
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On 13 Sep, 11:51, "John Rowland"
wrote: Kev wrote: What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. There are numerous food factories in Park Royal. Kodak has a huge factory in Wealdstone. Sorry, John but the Kodak factory in Wealdstone is now but a tiny shadow of what it once was. |
#33
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![]() Kev wrote What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. There is *some* manufacturing in fact. Looks at BT classified section. Boat & yacht building ? Makers of sparkling wine ? -- Mike D |
#34
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"Marratxi" wrote in message
oups.com On 13 Sep, 11:51, "John Rowland" wrote: Kev wrote: What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. There are numerous food factories in Park Royal. Kodak has a huge factory in Wealdstone. Sorry, John but the Kodak factory in Wealdstone is now but a tiny shadow of what it once was. Actually, when you drive past it now appears to be a pile of rubble. I don't know if any part of it is still open. |
#35
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"Kev" wrote in message
oups.com On Sep 8, 11:10 am, "John Rowland" wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: Now, somebody tell me why there's a factory in Croydon with a number written in binary on the roof: http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&hl...82013,-0.12222... It's not a binary number, it's an arrangement of skylights. The southern number alternates 1s and 0s, and the northern one nearly does, which suggests that the similarity to ones and zeroes is coincidental. If you look at the building further north, it has similar skylights but in a less interesting pattern. What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. Well, given how often there are lineside fires in premises with exploding gas cylinders, one has to assume there's actually still quite a bit of manufacturing in the London area. |
#36
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Kev wrote:
What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. There's this "little" thing called the Tate & Lyle Sugar Refinery down in Silvertown for starters: http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?t=k&ie=UTF8&hl=en&ll=51.500635,0.047261&spn=0 .002965,0.007296&z=17&om=1 Cheers, Barry |
#37
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On 13 Sep, 00:16, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Mon, 10 Sep 2007, Mizter T wrote: On 10 Sep, 00:41, "John Rowland" wrote: Mizter T wrote: I think I've located where the tower is - it's very near Southall station on a road called The Straight and is marked "Water Tower" on this map: http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=512448&y=179802 http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...tyle=o&lvl=2&t... There's a water tower converted to flats in Ladywell which I mentioned recently. http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhou...eLadywell3.jpg The best one is in Suffolk... http://www.devsys.co.uk/Album/Places...use%20in%20the... Thanks John, I don't know why I didn't think of using an aerial view to confirm my suspicions... I must be getting old and stuck in my ways! Problem is I'm quite a fan of the information-rich, if somewhat messy, A-Z style mapping that Streetmap offers - even if it is actually somewhat out of date - that I often don't look elsewhere. But I must remember to check out Live Maps... the 'birds eye view' facility is very useful. I find Multimap's mapping much better than Streetmap's, and they've given the interface a very good google-alike makeover recently. There's now a tickbox which shows you where cash machines are, which is a winner! It depends on where you're looking - but in London, both Streetmap and Multimap would appear to use exactly the same mapping sourced from Collins Bartholemew and copyrighted 2006. Elsewhere, say in Manchester, Multimap appears to use Tele Atlas mapping (copyright 2006) whilst Streetmap's just says "(c)streetmap.co.uk". So when looking at London mapping I've tended to use Streetmap, as I prefer the square window on the map that it provides and the great ability it has to serve you up a "Large Map". But the new version of Multimap, with it's ability to drag the map around (in Google Maps fashion), is also useful (though the somewhat tired computer I'm using at the moment struggles a bit with it!). I always liked Streetmap's very simple printer-friendly page, but I see now that Multimap's new simple printer-friendly page is pretty good as well. Multimap does directions too, unlike Streetmap, but I only ever really use this to find out distances rather than directions. Google maps has good aerial photos, of course, although their maps are ugly. It does have a super-nifty feature in some US cities, though: http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=empi...e=UTF8&ll=40.7... Yeah, that is neat. I thought you were going to refer to the slightly controversial 'Street view' available on Google Maps in some areas (still just available in San Francisco or has it spread elsewhere?). I was about to cross a main road near me a few weeks ago when a couple of people on cycles - at least one was a tricycle (can't remember the other) - got my attention. On the front of this young womans tricycle was some kind of contraption along with a hand-written notice to "Smile" - as she passed I saw the contraption was three smallish webcam-style cameras. So I am led to wonder whether they were gathering video for some London 'street view' or equivalent (I think something like this already exists, at least in central London, but I can't remember the name). However the whole arrangement was wobbling about somewhat and didn't look that professional (only 3 cameras) which leads me to wonder if they weren't in fact art students or the like, as I understand the Google 'Street View' images were/are gathered by a rather hi-tech van with loads of cameras mounted on it. Either way I'm just wondering where I might in the future see an image of myself standing on the side of the kerb, staring out looking totally gormless! |
#38
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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007, Recliner wrote:
"Kev" wrote in message oups.com What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. Well, given how often there are lineside fires in premises with exploding gas cylinders, one has to assume there's actually still quite a bit of manufacturing in the London area. Is a site with gas cylinders necessarily a manufacturing operation? tom -- non, scarecrow, forensics, rituals, bacteria, scientific instruments, .. |
#39
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On 15 Sep, 15:01, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2007, Recliner wrote: "Kev" wrote in message roups.com What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. Well, given how often there are lineside fires in premises with exploding gas cylinders, one has to assume there's actually still quite a bit of manufacturing in the London area. Is a site with gas cylinders necessarily a manufacturing operation? Quite - acetylene cylinders can be used anywhere requiring welding, such as a construction site, a breakers yard, a garage or a workshop. Only the last might qualify as a manufacturing operation. There isn't an enormous amount of actual manufacturing in London, but perhaps sometimes people think of the service sector as solely comprising offices, travel agents and florists. There's a lot of warehouse, workshop and other hands-on type activities in London (for want of a far better phrase), though quite often it's not always immediately obvious where this is happening. |
#40
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"Recliner" typed
"Marratxi" wrote in message oups.com On 13 Sep, 11:51, "John Rowland" wrote: Kev wrote: What surprises me is that there is a factory anywhere in London let alone Croydon or the whole of SE England come to that. I thought that London as a 100% service industry sector. I suppose it could be a warehouse for all those Far East imports. There are numerous food factories in Park Royal. Kodak has a huge factory in Wealdstone. Sorry, John but the Kodak factory in Wealdstone is now but a tiny shadow of what it once was. Actually, when you drive past it now appears to be a pile of rubble. I don't know if any part of it is still open. I think one of my acquaintances works there and has a kodak email address. -- Helen D. Vecht: Edgware. |
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