Pixburgh

New Castle Refractories Co.

tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo1_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo2_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo3_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo4_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo5_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo6_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo7_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo8_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo9_1280.jpg
tumblr_o8d6dsDzQ61qfcoqdo10_1280.jpg

New Castle Refractories - New Castle, PA

 

I photographed this 105 year old firebrick factory on Industrial Street about a month before they knocked it down. I didn't know it was slated for demo, just how it worked out. There was quite a bit left behind in the office, some interesting reports and employee data. The production floors were gutted, and the kilns were falling in on themselves. The letter they heartlessly tacked to the message board (fig. 4) to let the employees know their livelihood was gone was still there, next to a calendar that stopped in March 09. I have that letter now, it's right next to the one I liberated from Copperweld Steel, where my grandpa worked. 

 

Coincidentally, the company that shuttered and abandoned this plant also bought the refractories arm of Shenango China, which I photographed the same day. I guess there isn't much of a market for firebrick in a valley that no longer makes steel. These are the ripple effects of Black Monday. Trickle down deindustrialization I guess.

 

http://www.ncnewsonline.com/news/industrial-street-venture-rail-crossings-planned/article_402df67c-e642-11e5-a268-e3365e7eb5ad.html