- Shaw National Distribution Centre
Shaw National Distribution Centre is a home shopping-catalogue warehousing and distribution centre owned and operated by
Shop Direct Group located on Linney Lane ofShaw and Crompton , in theMetropolitan Borough of Oldham ,Greater Manchester , England.Although it occupies a number of 19th century built former
cotton mill s, it has been operated byLittlewoods as a distribution centre since 1989, distributing around 18 million individual items of stock to customers annually. [ [http://www.excellencenorthwest.co.uk/Resources/ExNW_6pg.pdf 2006 Business Excellence Awards] , URL accessed February 26, 2007.]ite
The Littlewoods Shaw Distribution Centre is currently the largest warehousing function within the Littlewoods Shop Direct Group, covering 23 acres and with (as of 2006) a workforce of over 850 employees (1250 at peak). [ [http://www.excellencenorthwest.co.uk/rollofhonour2006.html Roll of Honour] , Business Excellence North West, 2006. URL accessed December 5, 2006.]
The multi-million pound complex stores over convert|1000000|sqft|m2|-3|abbr=on of products, [ [http://www.lwsdg.co.uk/ourlocations/index.htm Our Locations - Warehousing] , www.lwsdg.co.uk, URL Accessed October 23, 2006.] and is made up of five buildings; three of which are converted cotton mills, built in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and two state-of-the-art purpose built buildings added in the mid 1990s. The first, seen from Linney Lane, is a world-class £61million automated Bulk-Carton Storage facility. the second, which is accessed from Beal Lane, is home to a vast state-of-the-art packing hall and a distribution centre. The site is one of Europe's largest warehouse distribution centres.
The centre is the biggest private employer in the
Metropolitan Borough of Oldham [ [http://www.oldhamadvertiser.co.uk/news/s/220/220185_littlewoods_pledges_400_new_jobs_.html Littlewoods pledges 400 new jobs] , "Oldham Advertiser ", URL accessed April 4, 2007.] with staff employed either through LSDG themselves or through theBlue Arrow work agency. The site is a recognised by the British Quality Foundation as an 'Investor in Excellence'. [ [http://www.quality-foundation.co.uk/rec_iie_committed.htm Investors in Excellence] British Quality Foundation, URL Accessed June 17, 2006.]History
The site has been operational since 1979, [ [http://www.excellencenorthwest.co.uk/Resources/ExNW_6pg.pdf 2006 Business Excellence Awards] , URL accessed February 26, 2007.] soon after
Littlewoods (then a P.L.C.) acquired the 20 acres of land occupied by no less than five cotton mills. "Lily", "Lily (No.2)" and "Newby" were stripped of their cotton-spinning heritage including the felling of chimneys and removal of reservoirs. They were also renovated and linked together with bridges. "Lily" and "Lily (No.2)" were equipped with a (then) hi-tec sorting system with the Lily mill becoming host to a huge state-of-the-art packing hall. Public land in front of the mills was also acquired and converted into trailer yards and staff car parks.Meanwhile the "Dee" and "Ash" mills were demolished with intention of using the land to further expand the complex. This however was prevented by the fact the Dee mill's engine house was protected by
English Heritage and so for the following 10 years, that's all that stood in the middle of a vast wasteland. Finally in the 1990s permission was granted to demolish the, now neglected, engine house and work began on building the extension to the now prosperous distribution centre. This included a massive project to reroute theRiver Beal from the centre of the land, to follow a path around the perimeter of the proposed building instead. The new building, which includes packing, sorting and distribution facilities complete with a large trailer yard, opened in 1997 and was put into full use in 2001.At around the same time the Littlewoods also bought the adjacent "Rutland" mill with the intention of continuing a bridge connection from the other mills and converting it into an automated storage facility. However, it was decided this would cost more money than simply replacing the mill with a purpose made building. Nearby residents were informed of the demolition of Rutland mill and its replacement with a new 'one storey' warehouse, which was duly approved. In reality the new building, which opened in 1997, although is technically 'one storey', it is almost as tall as its predecessor. The local council and residents were displeased and have since revamped planning permission criteria for the area.
Awards
In 2006, the site won the "Business Excellence in the North of England: 2006" award for private sector firms with more than 250 staff. [ [http://www.excellencenorthwest.co.uk/rollofhonour2006.html Roll of Honour] , Business Excellence North West, 2006. URL accessed December 5, 2006.]
Future
The site, as of 2007, is set to become the
retail company's only packing and distribution centre for non-bulk items, [ [http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,1771117,00.html "Littlewoods sheds 1,200 staff"] Guardian Unlimited, May 9, 2006. URL accessed June 10, 2006] employing nearly one thousand staff; strengthening Littlewoods Shop Direct's position as the Metropolitan Borough of Oldham's largest private employer.Criticism
The continued development of the site has brought some criticism from local residents.
* The new buildings, largely considered eyesores, have been accused of interfering with television reception due to their size and metallic structure. Fact|date=February 2007
* The increased work at the site has brought more and more heavy goods vehicles, which now operate heavily during the night. Trailer shunters also operate at night and the company have been approached several times by officials to be told to keep the noise down. Fact|date=February 2007
*In Autumn 2006,
Muslim staff at the warehouse contacted local media and claimed they had been forced to resort to hiding and eating in the stock-storage aisles duringRamadan , as they were not granted allowance for breaking their fasts. Unions however counter-claimed this was in line with policy, legislation and business needs. [ [http://www.oldhamadvertiser.co.uk/news/s/217/217935_muslim_staff_upset_by_littlewoods_attitude_to_ramadan_.html?rss=yes Muslim staff upset by Littlewoods’ attitude to Ramadan] , Ruhubia Akbor, "Oldham Advertiser ", September 27, 2006. URL accessed December 5, 2006.]ee also
*
List of Shaw and Crompton Mills References
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