The surviving building on this site has the characteristic long narrow form of a twentieth century rolling mill building and was once part of the Habershon's Holmes Mill Complex. The building is currently unoccupied but surrounded by light industrial premises The yard to the east of the building was formerly a Billet Yard (for the storage of raw materials for rolling) and was created by the clearance of the site of the Warrington Works of Peter Stubs and Co (see Munford 2002, 72-75). Illustrations of the Warrington Works show three ranges of buildings incorporating crucible stacks, forging shops and ornate gateways, whilst in the centre of the courtyard was an impressive cluster of 6 cementation furnaces (see Barraclough 1976, 27-29). These buildings survived until 1969 when they were demolished to make way for the billet yard and extension to the Habershon rolling mill. There is a potential for archaeological survival of the cementation and front ranges. This polygon has been recorded as having partial legibility of a mid 20th century steel works (the rolling mill shed).