Back to melia
Valid XHTML 1.0!
5. Milling & food manufacturing interior, pt. II
colourline

This wing is for storing everything. On the right, behind the wall are the loading platforms.
There are suspiciously big and fresh looking stacks of pallets loaded with Emballator food packagings.
Same hall, other direction.
Could be that this piece of scrap is also connected to packing food.
There are lots of pallets. Too many pallets... The area must be rented for logistics business, or then they just haven't managed to use all stuff by the closing time.
An instrument panel that seems to monitor eight different units.
An unspecified area between storages and the factory side.
Now we checked the upper platform of the production section. It has some more machines and entrance to the processing silos, this time comfortably via doors.
From this catwalk you can enter most of the processing silos. With this, I mean the silos that would push stuff straight to the machines, are embedded into the building and which take the space between the deseretd top floor's attics and these halls on ground level.
The same corner holds also some smaller tanks.
A sign warning about the pits.
The silo entrances are protected with iron doors shut with heavy levers. Inside, there's a minimal platform for standing, ladders down, and this type of pits. Surprisingly, they're not all the same kind. Some are bigger, some are wider etc.
Violator checking out one of the pits.
Stainless steel pipes and canals.
Blower. A window in nearby provides light to the otherwise so dim environment. This corner is next to a road which was driven also while we were here, but the windows were so blurred with grain dust that there was no risk of beeing seen through a window. Atleast something to reduce risks.
The second platform's biggest item is some kind of furnace. Conveyors lead here, many pipes come and go and catwalk surrounds the structure.
Same subject. Whatever in grain processing needs to be heated, it was probably done here.
This weighing appliance looks less hi-tech. But even with full automatic process controls, this was probably needed every now and then.