Mixed use business / industrial park in typical steel frame sheds. Erected since 1985. This polygon shows the extent of a small area developed in the late 19th century as a residential area then at the edge of Park Gate Works. This area consisted of 'grid iron' bylaw terraced housing which was provided with a small school and the 'Ebenezer Chapel' The housing appears to have been cleared between 1965 and 1985 but the chapel and school buildings have survived. These now constitute the only surviving built fabric of the Park Gate complex. The site to the north (HSY487) was previously the home to Park Gate Iron Works (see Munford 2003, 78-88) which opened in 1823 on land leased from the Earl Fitzwilliam to produce wrought iron bars, iron castings and tin plate. From 1839 to 1976 blast furnaces operated at the site. Cold pressed iron sheet production a major product including armour plate for the Royal Navy and the hull of Brunel's Great Eastern liner. The site ceased production soon after the 1967 nationalisation. Little survives to give legibility to the Park Gate site.