Late 1990s office development within former area of Little Sheffield Moor (see below). This area was heavily damaged by incendiary bombing during World War II (SCC 1945) and is shown as cleared land on the 1976 OS 1:10000. The present development is of concrete and steel construction with non traditional mono pitch roofs. Fragmentary legibility provided at no.1 Young Street by the retention of a façade from the 1908 former cardboard box factory of J Pickering and Sons. 1851 map evidence shows this area was formerly occupied by the Bridgefield Steel Works (partly within the present car park) and back to back housing. Within the area of 'Little Sheffield Moor' as depicted by Scurfield's reconstruction map (1986). Sheffield Moor: general information - Until at least the mid 1950s the former edges of Sheffield Little Moor were fossilised on the ground by the lines of Porter Street, Button Lane and Moore Street. These outlines were largely erased by the construction in the late 1950s to early 1960s of the Civic Circle of Arundel Gate, Fitzalan Gate and Charter Row. The area developed from the 1780s onwards, on a grid plan fitted within the former common area, with South Street defined from the start as a wide arterial boulevard.