free hit counter
Great Britain - Milton Green Highways Depot - Milton Green - October 2020 | Oblivion State Urban Exploration

Post a thread

Post a thread in one of the forums

Browse the forums

Browse threads and contribute to reports

Contact Staff

Contact the team

Great Britain Milton Green Highways Depot - Milton Green - October 2020

jtza

OS Full member
OS Full member
Joined
Nov 27, 2019
Messages
218
Reaction score
277
Points
63
Location
Lancashire
Milton Green Highways Depot

Visited with a non-member.

After looking online for a matter of hours I couldn’t find any substantial history on this site, I seem to be pretty useless at research. The depot was owned by Cheshire West and Chester council and carried out fleet maintenance for the council and surrounding area. The national archives provide a date of 1937 on the site page, but that doesn’t explicitly point to it being the date of construction. However, looking inside it may be possible. The site shut in 2011 and the most recent news article regarding the depot came in 2015. 105 homes were planned to be built on the land by Eccleston Homes. The plans included a village hall, ambulance station and of course the houses. At the front of the site the ambulance station is already present. I’d assume that this building was just going to be included in the plans. Anyways, the deadline for these plans were back in May 2015 and as of today, still sits derelict… The council have continued to have meetings up to 2019 where the CCP Depot is still mentioned yet nothing seems to be set in stone.

DSC01257.jpg


It was @KPUrban_ that pointed me towards this site after informing of us of the more well-known spot down the road. Once me and @DustySensorPhotography had checked said site we thought we should pop over the heras and have a look what was inside. With no idea as to what the site was apart from a wishful guess from KP, we went to work it out for ourselves. I was surprised to see little to no foot traffic throughout any of the buildings considering the easy access and where it is positioned relative to the other derp. Plenty of decay had settled in in the office block containing the reception and stores which made it worth documenting. This area linked directly to the maintenance workshop with an electricians shop, canteen, quarantine area and toilets/changing rooms all leading off. Outside of the main attraction was a couple of hangar type buildings that were empty and ruined. My assumption is that they acted as storage units for vehicles that were either waiting for maintenance or waiting for deployment, but I could be wrong. With a little more history, it could point to their former use around construction time.

Reception Block.

DSC01254.jpg



DSC01256.jpg


Looking through the windows as we walked the perimeter of the building increased our expectations before getting inside. Sadly, what we saw on the outside turned out to be all that was of interest.

We began in the Stores. They were bare but had a great English Electric installation at the back of the room.

DSC01208.jpg



DSC01209.jpg


The stores then lead straight to the large workshop. It was of course empty but came as a surprise due to the way we entered the site meaning we didn’t see the size of this area. A few slightly dated features were sat inside but not many. Most of the health and safety posters up around the room were dated as 1989.

DSC01210.jpg



DSC01212.jpg



DSC01217.jpg



DSC01211.jpg


Quarantine Area.

DSC01218.jpg


Office inside the workshop.

DSC01220.jpg


A shot from the opposite side of the room.

DSC01223.jpg


The canteen could be found here, and it was originally an “Electrical Test Shop” before they used it as a canteen. It wasn’t the most impressive canteen.

DSC01215.jpg



DSC01214.jpg


Next door was the new electricians shop.

DSC01216.jpg


Once we had finished shooting the workshop we moved through towards the reception area and the remaining offices which were the best areas in my opinion due to the amount of the decay.

DSC01219.jpg



DSC01225.jpg



DSC01224.jpg


For the remainder of the explore we had to battle with the most cobwebs and flies we’d encountered yet. We used anything we could to waft them out the way. Towards the end of the corridor, it got too much, and we resulted to crawling. In some of these shots you can just about make them out. The amount of cobwebs was surprising and indicated hardly anyone had walked through here in a while.

DSC01227.jpg



DSC01226.jpg


Enquiries. Allowing a peek into the offices to come.

DSC01228.jpg


Corridor.

DSC01230.jpg



DSC01232.jpg



DSC01241.jpg



DSC01240.jpg


This shot gives you a better idea of the maze of cobwebs.

DSC01243-2.jpg


One of the hangar type buildings. There were two of these buildings left and this was the only one accessible at the time. I doubt the other one is any different.

DSC01248.jpg



DSC01249.jpg


The remaining buildings. The building far west of the site is part used by the ambulance service and is not accessible.

DSC01258.jpg



DSC01252.jpg


That is all, thanks for reading!​
 

BikinGlynn

OS Full member
OS Full member
Joined
Jun 3, 2019
Messages
795
Reaction score
997
Points
93
I quite like that, love the benches in the workshop.
 

jane doe

OS Full member
OS Full member
Joined
Jun 4, 2018
Messages
370
Reaction score
324
Points
63
Location
Surrey
Really like that , a real mixture of things to see and photograph , some lovely decay in there ... enjoyed looking at your photos :)
 

The_Raw

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Joined
Dec 16, 2013
Messages
3,931
Reaction score
2,186
Points
113
Love that overgrown entrance!
 
Top