#bircks — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #bircks, aggregated by home.social.
-
Some photos from Maria Island, off the east coast of Tasmania. Historic building-wise it's best known for Darlington, a complex of convict-era buildings but there are many interesting ruin out in the surrounding bush.
And I mean *in*the bush. This brick/lime kiln has bush around and above!
Not sure if these are convict-era or later industrial/cement works era as the brickworks site was in use during both.
-
Some photos from Maria Island, off the east coast of Tasmania. Historic building-wise it's best known for Darlington, a complex of convict-era buildings but there are many interesting ruin out in the surrounding bush.
And I mean *in*the bush. This brick/lime kiln has bush around and above!
Not sure if these are convict-era or later industrial/cement works era as the brickworks site was in use during both.
-
Some photos from Maria Island, off the east coast of Tasmania. Historic building-wise it's best known for Darlington, a complex of convict-era buildings but there are many interesting ruin out in the surrounding bush.
And I mean *in*the bush. This brick/lime kiln has bush around and above!
Not sure if these are convict-era or later industrial/cement works era as the brickworks site was in use during both.
-
Some photos from Maria Island, off the east coast of Tasmania. Historic building-wise it's best known for Darlington, a complex of convict-era buildings but there are many interesting ruin out in the surrounding bush.
And I mean *in*the bush. This brick/lime kiln has bush around and above!
Not sure if these are convict-era or later industrial/cement works era as the brickworks site was in use during both.
-
Some photos from Maria Island, off the east coast of Tasmania. Historic building-wise it's best known for Darlington, a complex of convict-era buildings but there are many interesting ruin out in the surrounding bush.
And I mean *in*the bush. This brick/lime kiln has bush around and above!
Not sure if these are convict-era or later industrial/cement works era as the brickworks site was in use during both.