TR1056 : Hoppers Oast
taken 9 years ago, near to Chartham Hatch, Kent, Great Britain

Five square kilned oast house. Before being converted to dwellings, the building was used as a bakery. It is converted to four dwellings, known as Cobbs, Harveys, Flints, and Neames, all named after local breweries.
Cobbs Brewery was based in Margate (until 1968), Harveys of Lewes (1790-present), Flint & Co in Canterbury (1797-?) and Shepherd Neame in Faversham (1698-present).
An Oast House is a building used to dry fresh hops before they are sent to the brewers, to be used for flavouring beer. A traditional Oast House consists of the 'oast' and the 'stowage'. The oast was a kiln, with a plenum chamber fired by charcoal at ground floor and the drying floor directly above. The steep pitched roof channelled the hot air through the hops to the top. The stowage, was the barn section, it had a cooling floor and press at first floor and storage area at ground floor. Read more Link
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- Grid Square
- TR1056, 61 images (more nearby
)
- Photographer
- N Chadwick (find more nearby)
- Date Taken
- Wednesday, 10 April, 2013 (more nearby)
- Submitted
- Friday, 28 June, 2013
- Geographical Context
- Subject Location
-
OSGB36:
TR 1011 5621 [10m precision]
WGS84: 51:15.9781N 1:0.6250E - Camera Location
-
OSGB36:
TR 1013 5621
- View Direction
- West-northwest (about 292 degrees)



