This area includes the sites of the goits dams and buildings of the Broomhall Wheel (cutlery grinding) and The Broomhall Mill (corn milling). The earliest known records quoted by Crossley et al (1989) for these sites are 1759 and 1664 respectively. The sites appear to have fallen into disuse by 1891 when all trace of the water channels and dams has been removed (although the building of Broomall Corn Mill may have survived through absorption into a packing case works. The edges of this polygon were developed for residential use by 1891 with small terraced housing and back to backs - probably built between 1851 and 1864. Industrial uses dominated the centre. In the mid twentieth century two large multi-storey tool works were built - probably destroying the site of Broomhall Wheel. This area has been redeveloped since 1999 as health clubs and offices. The site of Broomhall Corn Mill has not yet been redeveloped and may contain important archaeological deposits. Legibility is fragmentary, as a historic chapel building survives from the earlier residential phase.