Now occupied by low rise flats constructed in the late 1980s/ early 1990s on the site of the Limbrick wheels and dam. A building lease was issued in 1723 and a cutlers wheel built by 1727. In 1845, the wheel was subject to rattening with stones broken and the horses set on fire. The works was further damaged by the Great Flood in 1864 with compensation paid to the owners. Rebuilding reconfigured the dam, weir and works (Ball et al, 2006:71-73). The works are labelled on 20th century OS maps making 'edge & joiners tools', later 'edge & garden tools' and continued to be labelled as a 'tool works' into the 1970s. The area may have been utilised as valley floor meadows prior to the works. Scurfields (1986) reconstruction of Harrisons 1637 survey suggests the area may have once been wood pasture. The later weir and traces of the outfall remain making legibility of the former character partial.