Quote:"During the end of February 2007 Michael Scott of Photo Addiction visited the Longbridge plant to get an idea of the current state of the place. It must be stressed that although official entry was not used, he, and many others that visit the site just want to look and will take nothing, leave nothing and damage nothing. The result of Michael’s visits are some absolutely stunning photographs of the state of the plant now."
These have been posted before but there are some interesting pictures inside Longbridge including the tunnels, taken a while back in 2007 by 'Urban Explorers"
Links:
http://www.28dayslat...ight=longbridgehttp://www.28dayslat...read.php?t=9321How it happened............BMW had poured money into Rover to develop the desperately needed new models like the Rover 75 and new MINI to secure the long term future of Rover, that previous British owners like BAE had failed to finance or invest in. BAe had bought state owned Rover for £150 million from the goverment in 1988 then asset stripped the properties and sold off factory sites and large chunks of the Cowley Oxford plant for property development for their own gain before selling what was left of Rover and its outdated range of cars to BMW in 1994 for £800 million cash making a further vast profit for BAe in the process.................
The brand new MINI production line financed by BMW had actually been fully installed and tested by Rover engineers at Longbridge in 1999/2000 and was making the first bodyshells, when the change of plan came and the major job of swapping MINI from Longbridge and Rover 75 from Cowley Oxford started. The entire body in white facility and assembly line for the MINI had to be moved 70 miles south while the entire Rover 75 facilities moved 70 miles north. It took 9 months, cost £230 million and delayed the launch of the MINI into showrooms until 2001.
The first 15-20 pre-production MINI's were all built at Longbridge. The book New MINI by Graham Robson has the full fascinating story and the reasons behind what happened all in detail.
BMW had bit of far more than they could chew (in world car company terms they are actually a small company) and left too much of Rover under control of bad British management and then started to haemorrhage money which threatened to bring down the previously profitable BMW Group with it. BMW eventually sold Rover in March 2000 for just £10 to John Towers British management Phoenix team with £500 million pounds as a goodwill gift and the 4 British directors spent the last 5 years of MG-Rover trying to sell out to the Chinese and lining their own pockets for their own short term personal gains..............as was proved in the recent inquiry, needless to say they are all now rich men living in luxury mansions never needing to work again!
http://news.bbc.co.u...ess/4574603.stm