The Lost Cloths: The Grave of Yarn

in TravelFeed19 days ago



Once, Forst in Lusatia dressed half of Germany in fine cloth; today, colorful yarn lies rotting on factory floors like offerings in an industrial grave. Between crumbling brick palaces, mosaicked halls and the last chimney of the “German Manchester,” only ruins remember the thousands of women who wove for the world.

The empty halls are hugeThe empty halls are huge

Now, start-ups, a museum and a “Founders’ Dream Factory” move into the empty giants, while lost-places photographers hunt for the beauty in decay. This article follows the rise and abrupt end of the GDR cloth factories – and asks what remains when an entire industry disappears overnight.

The story of a century

This is yarn, tons ofThis is yarn, tons of

For a century, the textile industry, alongside lignite mining, was the backbone of Lusatia. With the collapse of the GDR, the history of the VEB Tuchfabriken Forst (Forst Cloth Factories) came to an end. Three decades later, only ruins remain to remind us of its former grandeur.

The last chimneyThe last chimney

The move must have been carried out with the utmost haste. After more than a hundred years of weaving cloth in the large brick buildings of the factories owned by Adolf Noack and Hermann Bergami in the town of Forst in Lusatia, everything collapsed very quickly. What remained of the "German Manchester," as Lower Lusatia had long been known, was simply left behind.

An empty factory

InstallationsInstallations

Like the proverbial "shroud" from Gerhard Hauptmann's poem "The Weaver," remnants of fabric still cover the floor of the empty factories. Tens of thousands of spindles of colorful yarn have defied the wind and weather in this tomb, the winds blowing in through the broken windows.

More spindlesMore spindles

A pallet jack stands nearby, along with machines and enigmatic devices. That's all that remains of a globally successful industry, 30 years after its demise.

Transportation carsTransportation cars

A century of industrial history is contained within the crumbling walls that rise like a monument to lost industrial power in this town of 17,000 inhabitants on the Neisse River. From small cloth factories, which resourceful entrepreneurs had established here as early as 1840, a textile empire emerged with industrialization at the end of the 19th century, one that also included the companies of Noack and Bergami.

The fabric is made of bricksThe fabric is made of bricks

200 spinning mills

Nearly 200 weaving mills, spinning mills, sewing factories, and dye works supplied Germany and the world at that time. In 1927, a book by the Association for Local Politics described Forst as a "forest of chimneys with long plumes of smoke, factory after factory, covering entire districts in every part of town."

Another empty halleAnother empty halle

Everywhere was "the whoosh of the weaver's shuttle, the clatter of the chairs; steam puffs out, coal dust swirls around." Day and night, the steam boilers ran, and the "Black Jule" light rail brought coal from the Lusatian open-cast mines to the central power plant.

The schedule table for the shiftsThe schedule table for the shifts

The textile capital

At that time, one in five Germans wore a suit made of Lusatian fabric. Forst was Germany's undisputed textile capital: in 1938, half of its 38,000 inhabitants worked in one of the 450 local textile factories, where a quarter of a million spindles whirred away.

It’s all in ruinsIt's all in ruins

In the five-story brick building of the Bergami company, listed in the 1928 German Reich Directory as a manufacturer of napped woolen fabrics called "cloths and buckskins," thousands of spindles now lie scattered haphazardly on the floor.

Someone sleeps here, maybeSomeone sleeps here, maybe

The last Chimney

The last chimney of the Lusatian textile industry stands right next to the Sleeping Beauty castle of the former production buildings. Also left behind in the vast, bright halls is the board on which the spinning department planned its machine schedules; rolling pallets and the wooden storage units of the administration remain.

The viewThe view 

The building is not a ruin, despite the missing windows and the young trees growing here and there from floorboards that are slowly turning to earth. The walls are still standing, and the floor in the former factory halls, which the textile manufacturers had decorated with mosaics in the style of princely palaces, shows hardly any signs of final destruction.

Look at the bottom of the floor. This once was a gold mineLook at the bottom of the floor. This once was a gold mine

The home of Wehrmacht uniforms

The buildings, which during the Second World War primarily supplied fabric for Wehrmacht uniforms and blankets, are impressive.

Yarn as floorYarn as floor

The collapse at the end was total. The last offensive of the Soviet Army directly overran Forst. Most of the factories were destroyed. And no sooner had reconstruction been achieved than expropriation and consolidation followed, first into the VEB Modetuch (state-owned fashion textile company), later into the VEB Tuchfabriken (state-owned textile factories), where thousands of women wove, spun, and dyed for export to the West.

Remainings of 200 yearsRemainings of 200 years

The Always Liqueur

With reunification, this final chapter of the history of the German Manchester also came to an end. The textile factories, run into the ground, were no longer competitive and were liquidated faster than they could be emptied. The second set of buildings is still far too big.

This spindle is perfectThis spindle is perfect

The city administration moved into one building, another now houses the Textile Museum, and a third is home to the start-up company "ImmerLikör" (Always Liqueur).

All the windows are stolenAll the windows are stolen

The enormous complex of the Noack and Bergami buildings, however, has for some time now belonged to a young entrepreneur who runs her "Founders' Dream Factory" here, offering photo tours for "lost places" enthusiasts.

In some levels the ruin looks goodIn some levels the ruin looks good Another spindle lft hereAnother spindle lft here To the shelterTo the shelter Call him! Or herCall him! Or her Don’t know what it isDon't know what it is The perfect view to the small town ForstThe perfect view to the small town Forst
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