Haven Mill, Garth Lane, Grimsby: Historic Building Investigation
Author(s): Kathryn Sather and Associates
Haven Mill is a 19th-century flour mill situated in Grimsby, North East Lincolnshire. The building is Grade II listed. The structure was erected as a warehouse between 1815 and 1821 and was owned by William Marshall & Sons. The building was then enlarged and converted for use as a steam mill between 1821 and the 1840s. Between 1848 and 1879 a detached two-storey range was added to the west of the site and between 1879 and 1887 the mill was enlarged again. The building remained in use as a mill and warehouse until the mid-20th century and in 1978 it was converted to a public house and shops to the ground floor, restaurant to the first floor and a decade later, a nightclub to the second floor. The ground-floor shop units are currently occupied, but the rest of the structure is no longer in use. The two-storey range to the west of the mill is currently empty, but may soon be developed to form part of the offices of an architecture firm. This report has been undertaken as part of the Grimsby Heritage Action Zone Project (HAZ) and to provide an understanding of the evolution of the structure, providing a chronological interpretation of the building's development to its current form.
- Report Number:
- 32/2019
- Series:
- Research Report
- Pages:
- 49
- Keywords:
- Modern Post Medieval Standing Building Standing Structure Heritage Action Zone