Whatever
happened to our Cast Iron Street nameplates? Using
my position as Chair of Scrutiny for Transportation and Street Services I've been
trying to locate where removed cast iron street nameplates have gone. My endeavours
to revealed a stock of cast iron nameplates at two Council depots. Photographs
of them can be seen at: The
Officers have catalogued the ones they have and they are as follows: Phillip
Street store room Belmont Passage B4 Bennetts Hill B2 Bennetts Hill
B2 Brunel Street B2 Cannon Street B2 Cherry Street B2 Cherry Street
B2 Congreve Passage B3 Congreve Passage B3 Corporation Street B4 Corporation
Street B4 Corporation Street B4 Digbeth B5 Eden Place B3 Edgbaston
Street B5 Floodgate Street Gooch Street North B5 Mainstream Way B7 Navigation
Street B5 Needless Alley B2 Northwood Street B3 Severn Street B1 Temple
Row West B2 Temple Street B2 Union Street B2 Upper Dean Street B5 Upper
Gough Street B1 Upper Gough Street B1 Warwick Passage B2 

Thimble
Mill Depot Staplehurst Road Cotteridge Road Rectory Road Jarvis
Road Warwick Passage B2 

The
above list does not account for all the cast iron signs lost in the city over
recent years. These have either been stolen for scrap metal or broken - one of
the problems with cast iron plates is that they break easily to sledge.hammer
blows. To have
a new cast iron nameplate made costs between £300 to £400 to produce.
A modern flat aluminum nameplates cost £80. Prototypes
of plastic replicas of the cast iron name plates have been made and are being
assessed. Two are presently in situ in Needless Alley at the New Street corner
and Grosvenor St West off Broad Street. The
plastic replicas are strengthened using a mild steel back support. Having seen
them at first hand it is very hard to tell the difference between the cast iron
and the plastic replica's. Also the plastic nameplates weigh a fraction of the
cast iron nameplates - the cast iron nameplates are incredibly heavy. 

At
the moment the Council only replaces 6 cast iron nameplates a year. The cost of
producing plastic replica nameplates in such low volumes is between £200
to £300 each. If the Council buy 20 a year, the individual cost plummets
to £100 per sign. Finally
below are photos of the recently erected wooden salt dome at Thimble Mill Lane
depot. I was so impressed by it's structure - it looks like something out of a
Martian landscape 


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