Site Records
Truro: ROC Group HQ No 11Albert Place Daniel
Street Truro OS Grid Ref: SW821445 Date protected accommodation
opened: 4.5.1963 Date closed: 31.12.19973 Location: Daniel Street, Truro
Description: EXTANT
Truro Group HQ is a standard design surface blockhouse of concrete
construction similar to Exeter (Poltimore Park) and Wrexham (Borras).
The building is partly rendered and partly faced in local granite. The
administration block alongside is also faced in local stone.
The operations room and No.
11 Group closed on the 31st March 1973 and all the posts were transferred to 10
Group. The premises lay unused for two years until 1st June 1975 when the operations
room was re-opened for a special duties team within No. 10 Group. At General stand
down on 30th September 1991, the special duties team were transferred to the RAF
and continued uninterrupted until total stand down on 31st December 1995 making
it the last ROC Group Control to close.
From that date the building was retained under care and maintenance
of the RAF at St. Mawgan and the administration block was leased to
the Truro Driving Test Centre The driving test centre moved out at the
end of 2001 and the site was offered for sale. The bunker was demolished
in 2003 and new housing now stands on the site.
Internally
the protected blockhouse is little changed from 1973, painted cream with original
names remaining on all the doors. The building is now damp with the paint pealing
in places and when visited in February 2002 the power had been disconnected and
the windows of the administration block boarded up. The main entrance is in
a recessed porch, to the right is a steel blast door into the filter room with
its banks of filters still in place and to the left a second blast door; once
inside the main spine corridor is to the right. The first room on the right is
the plant room which is still in excellent condition. The ventilation plant and
trunking is original but the compressors were replaced in the 1980's and still
look new. At the back of the plant room is the standby generator room, with only
500 hours on the clock of the Dorman diesel generator. The room also contains
switchgear and the control cabinet for the generator. The next room on the
right is the two level control room, with a balcony looking down into the well.
There were various ordnance survey maps around the walls showing South West England
and the whole of the UK (one of these shows the Backbone microwave network). These
maps were all removed as they were due to be burnt. On the floor is a portable
GPO switchboard and a UHF radio switchboard (which was also removed and will be
taken to Acomb). There is nothing on the balcony above apart from the pipes for
the BPI and FSM.
Beyond
the control room is a small store (empty) and stairs to the upper level. Beyond
the stairs is the GPO room which still retains part of a small wall mounted GPO
distribution frame and some more recent BT junction boxes and wiring. Beyond
the GPO room is the canteen (now completely empty) and beyond that the small kitchen
which is still fully equipped with 1960's appliances. There is an industrial Creda
cooker and separate grill, a sink, water heater and long food preparation service
and a glass serving window into the canteen. Beyond the canteen is an air lock
and to the right the emergency exit blast door and a second recessed porch. On
the right hand side of the spine corridor the first two rooms are for decontamination
with a sink and a shower head. The next room is the ladies toilet with two cubicles,
two showers, two sinks, a water heater and an incinerator for sanitary towels.
The male toilets have 2 sinks, two urinals, one cubicle and one shower. Beyond
the toilets is the officers room with two desks and a keyboard and the final two
rooms are the male and female dormitories which are completely empty. On the
upper floor apart from the balcony there is the tank room and the radio room with
parts of the floor mounted racks still in place. There are a number of 1960's
telephones still in place throughout the blockhouse.
Photo: The
bunker being demolished in April 2003 Photo by Lawrence Holmes Being
close to Truro City centre the former Group headquarters was a prime candidate
for development and shortly after the site was sold in 2002 it was announced that
the bunker would be demolished and a new housing estate built on the site. Demolition
started in April 2003. Thanks to Ward Westwater for arranging this visit.
RSG Site Visit: 18th February 2002
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