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Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall: the dining room with the gallery above

RIBA109838
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall: the living room

RIBA109839
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall: the hallway leading to the bedroom

RIBA109840
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall: the electric turbine

RIBA109841
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall

RIBA109842
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting. See RIBA109845 for a colour version of this image.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall

RIBA109843
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall

RIBA109844
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting. See RIBA109827 for a very similar version in black and white.

Kenningstock Mill, Camelford, Cornwall

RIBA109845
Austin-Smith, John Michael (1918-1999)
NOTES: The mill building dates back before the 19th century and was still in use up to 1957 (corn being ground until 1947 and china clay until 1957). The china clay was ground through water turbine generated electricity. The architects Michael and Inette Austin-Smith converted the mill into a house with a gallery on the top floor in 1980, making use of the mill's hydro-electric power to provide heating and lighting. See RIBA109842 for a black and white version of this image.

F. Dzerzhinskii Spinning Mill, Ivanovo-Voznesensk (later Ivanovo)

RIBA111578
NOTES: This is from a series of postcards on interwar Soviet architecture from the series 'SSSR na stroike' (USSR in construction), belonging to Berthold Lubetkin.

Millennium Mills buildings, Royal Docks, West Silvertown, London

RIBA113765
NOTES: The complex was built from 1933 to 1954.

Millennium Mills buildings, Royal Docks, West Silvertown, London

RIBA113766
NOTES: The complex was built from 1933 to 1954.
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