The Denim Factory (London)

United Kingdom / England / London / Davenant Street, 4-6
 office building, block of flats, historical building

In the early nineteenth century this site was an open yard, for coaches and with stables, south of which there was a brewery (the White Horse Brewery by the 1860s) behind cottages and a beer-shop, all seemingly held by Rayden Gower, Willian Bayford and then Samuel Bartram, a coachmaker as well as a brewer. New buildings in 1848 provided coach-building and painting workshops. There were further adaptations before redevelopment in 1899-1900 for S. Schneider & Son, garment makers, for whom Robert W. Hobden was the architect, and Seth Grist Ltd the builders. Their substantial four-story factory building, with its striking red- and white-brick facade with terracotta trim, had by 1904 been taken by H. Lotery & Co., wholesale clothiers, Schneiders' short occupancy perhaps an upshot of the fire of 1901 that destroyed their main factory further east. Ellis & Goldstein Ltd, also clothiers, had the premises by 1940. After extensive bomb-damage reconstruction behind the facade, Mornessa Ltd sold the site to the Greater London Council in 1966. Numerous clothing-trade tenants continued here through the later decades of the twentieth century. Conversion and refurbishment to provide eight offices below fourteen flats in 'The Denim Factory' came in 2006-8 for HBC Investments, designs by Alan Camp Architects being followed by others from McGregor Associates, architects. Source: surveyoflondon.org/map/feature/447/detail/
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Coordinates:   51°31'5"N   -0°3'56"E
This article was last modified 8 years ago