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Lister Mills (otherwise known as Manningham Mills) was the largest silk factory in the world.<ref name = "Dalesman">Template:Cite news</ref> It is located in the Manningham district of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England and was built by Samuel Cunliffe Lister to replace the original Manningham Mills which had been destroyed by fire in 1871.<ref name=sunday-times-the-ultimate-conversion>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref> The mill is a Grade II* listed building, built in the Italianate style of Victorian architecture.<ref>Template:NHLE</ref>
HistoryEdit
On completion in 1873, Lister's was the largest textile mill in the north of England. Floor space in the mill amounts to Template:Cvt, and its imposing shape remains a dominant feature of the Bradford skyline. The chimney of the mill is Template:Convert high, and can be seen from most areas of Bradford. It cost about £10,000 to build, and its total weight has been estimated at Template:Convert. Samuel Lister called it "Lister's Pride".<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Until the arrival of electric power in 1934, the mill was driven by steam engines. Every week the boilers consumed 1,000 tons of coal brought in on company rail wagons from the company collieries near Pontefract. Water was also vital in the process and the company had its own supply network including a large covered reservoir on-site (by 2006 that area had become a piazza and underground car park).
At its height, Lister's employed 11,000 men, women and children – manufacturing high-quality textiles such as velvet and silk. It supplied Template:Convert of velvet for King George V's coronation and in 1976 new velvet curtains for the President Ford White House. During the Second World War Lister's produced Template:Convert of real parachute silk, Template:Convert of flame-proof wool, Template:Convert of khaki battledress and Template:Convert of parachute cord.<ref name = "Dalesman"/>
A strike in 1890–91 at the mill was important in the establishment of the Independent Labour Party which later helped found the modern-day Labour Party.
Decline and RebirthEdit
The Listers' business decreased considerably during the 1980s. Stiff foreign competition and changing textile trends such as increased use of artificial fibres were the reasons. In 1999, the mills were closed.<ref name="sunday-times-the-ultimate-conversion" /> Being a prominent structure, the mills attracted a great deal of attention and several regeneration proposals came and went. The sheer size of the buildings being a major difficulty.
In 2000, property regeneration company Urban Splash bought Lister Mills from the administrators, Ernst and Young, with plans to renovate the silk warehouse. Costs for the project were estimated to be £100 million. Renovation work began in 2003, and construction formally began in September 2004. 131 new homes and 3 ground floor commercial units were subsequently completed in the large buildings. Construction was finished in 2006, but evidently left a majority of the site unmaintained.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The second phase was the regeneration of the largest building on the site, the velvet mill, by replacing the existing roof of the building with a glass and steel structure, housing two storey apartments and creating additional ground floor commercial spaces, whilst preserving original architectural features under the design of David Morley Architects.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The new homes went on sale in early 2007.
See alsoEdit
- Grade II* listed buildings in Bradford
- Listed buildings in Bradford (Toller Ward)
- Bliss Tweed Mill
- Salts Mill