| 2. The Interior |
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Bottom section east of the kiln has suffered heavily of weather and time.
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Open doors' day every day.
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Utilising all the meager daylight that was available we managed to take this general interior shot. It is messed and ruined around, and not really very interesting.
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Supplier of light.
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Narrow space between kiln and facade wall.
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Scrapped remains of carriages.
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Possibly a roll of fine mill for clay - if such thing ever belonged to the factory's machinery.
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A-ha! The kiln has burnt cox. And the boxy carriages would feed it.
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Old sticks and laths are all around.
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Kiln's wall and lath jungle.
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Is this toothwheel old or what?
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A section not up any more. I suppose it's this way where clay was transported in with certain carriages. But who cares, it's now just a pile of wood.
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Here we have climbed upper on the platforms created by old planks. The old song asking Kuljemmeko vetten päällä? came into mind while walking the planks.
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Another section that should be referred to as ruin instead of section in the back.
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Go on, just walk! The platforms were slightly insecure.
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The window looks to front yard. This is one of the "storeys" we had expected to find when approaching the place. It wasn't quite as exciting from inside, though.
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Looking at the place's state today it's hard to imagine the use for any doors inside the factory, but there have been some doors somewhere there, anyway.
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Smoke stack rose uncovered through the middle of the building just to end right above the ceiling.
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Here's a representative of the formerly mentioned group of farming machines. It would belong to a museum.
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Cast text"Triumf Patentti" reminds of times when Finland had not enough engineering capacity to design and construct mechanical wonders like a grain mill independently.
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E&J. Leino machine workshop from Salo, the neighbor city of Halikko has produced the machine.
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