Artwork for podcast Footprints
Bath's Industrial Past and Present
Episode 423rd July 2025 • Footprints • Pommy Harmar
00:00:00 00:45:08

Share Episode

Shownotes

This month's episode explores Bath’s industrial past and the enormous changes in the landscape Bath has seen over the decades, since many of the factories have disappeared. 

Bath’s architectural landscape is often only viewed as Georgian or Roman and we forget that it has had an illustrious industrial past.

We meet Peter Dunn, who from the age of 7 wanted to build cranes. He was taken on as an apprentice by Stothert and Pitt, Bath's 'Crane maker to the World', and he is responsible for restoring one of their oldest cranes, which now sits outside Newarks Works, where Stothert and Pitt used to be.

Following this, writer and local historian Paul Fisher talks about Bath's furniture manufacturing history and the modernist buildings which housed them. We start at Lidl and walk over to the Hermann Miller building on the city side of the river.

Finally we find out from Steve George what kinds of considerations are needed when deciding what can and should be built in this wonderful Unesco World Heritage city. Steve is Bath and North East Somerset Council's Principal Planner in the Planning Policy Department.

Credits

Music: Audionautix

Produced by Pommy Harmar

Links

Stothert and Pitt

'Oldest Stothert and Pitt crane set to be restored' - BBC online

Paul Fisher - Walks to Works 2, Smallish Publishing 2025

Bath and North East Somerset Council Planning Policy Department - www.bathnes.gov.uk/local-planning-policy-and-guidance

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube