Located on the border of Ealing, Brent and Hammersmith,
Park Royal is London’s largest industrial site. The birthplace of the Routemaster bus, Park Royal is home to household names such as McVities, who
have been making biscuits here for over 100 years and today have over 700 employees. While Sunbeam Group, who have 35 employees, design and install shop fittings for the likes of Selfridges. Nearby is Brompton Bicycles, who recently moved to a new larger site in Greenford. Down the road in Chiswick is Fullers’ Griffin Brewery – London’s oldest brewery – that
has been providing the city with fine Ale since 1845. Together with neighboring boroughs, Hillingdon and Hounslow, this part
of North West London accounts for nearly a third of total manufacturing employment.
Many manufacturing workers can also be found alongside
the River Thames in East London. Industrial sites on either side the river span the boroughs of Greenwich, Newham, Bexley, Havering and Barking and Dagenham. The Ford engine factory in Dagenham Dock is reportedly
the single largest manufacturing plant in London, with 1,800 employees. “Out of the strong, came forth sweetness” – goes the motto of UK heritage brand Tate & Lyle who have two sites on the Silverside peninsula in Newham.
Their Thames Refinery is the largest sugar refinery in the EU. While a mile away their Plaistow Wharf site ships out over a million tins of golden syrup every month.
One of the largest industrial corridors in London,
the Upper Leigh Valley spans the boroughs of Enfield, Haringey, Waltham Forest and Hackney.
Once famous for guns and motorcycles, today it acts as a gateway to and from London, given its proximity to the North Circular. There is a Warburton’s factory working around the clock to provide the city with its daily bread while Coca Cola has been bottling drinks here for over 40 years.