Old Hemp Factory of Edessa
The Hemp Factory of Edessa, Greece, was an industrial unit focused on the creation of ropes from Indian hemp twine. It was the largest of the four hemp factories in Greece, in production and facilities. It is also a unit of the Water Museum of Edessa, where it is placed at the site "Megalos Kremnos" next to the traditional quarter of the city and the well-known Park of Waterfalls. It operated as a factory until 1967, and then it was abandoned. Later in 1997, the factory turned into a Recreation and Education Center, where it continues to operate until 2014, when it is finally closed.
Establishment
The founding of the company was made in 1908 by the company Totskas and Co. and other smaller shareholders from Thessaloniki, who wanted to develop the textile industry in Greece. The choice of location where the factory was built was because Edessa's wider area was abundant in waterfalls where it would help to operate the engines as they were supported by waterworks. Its address was assigned to the experienced industrialist Iraklis HatzidimoulaAcme 1928-1950
The full edge of the factory is placed in the period 1928 - 1940, during which it employs 150 workers. Particularly during the interwar period, the factory covered the demand for fabrics and twine all over Greece. Coarse ropes went to Crete, to Thessaly and Epirus, while the thin ropes in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace. However, there was a stagnation in the distribution of products between October and March.Decline 1952-1966
The loss of aquaculture acquis, the amount of debts to banks, shareholders' disputes, and government led to bankruptcy and closure of the factory in May 1966. The 100 workers of the Hemp Factory founded the "Production Cooperative Pella" and undertake its management. Later in 1967, the management committee asked I.S.R.S a loan to continue the factory operation, but in vain. The factory closed and the state became the owner.Factory Complex
Pre-existing Infrastructures
- Two-storey building for packaging and shipping the product.
- The storage building of the raw material.
- Station of water course for moving the engines.
- Single-story building of the product.
- The building of the machine shop and the boiler room.
- Two outposts.
- Two-storey building with offices and sanitary facilities.
Subsequent Infrastructures (Renovation of 1997)
- 2 Outdoor Lifts
- Path along the cliff
- Recreation Center
- Information Building
Educational and Entertainment Use
Start of Operation 1997
At the end of 1990, after 40 years of abandonment, the complex was partially renovated by the municipality of Edessa where in 1997 a restaurant and leisure center served by a double lift along the cliff was constructed. Later, the Hemp Factory became part of the "Mill Rehabilitation Program" for the complete upgrading and refurbishment of the surrounding area.The program included:
- Remodeling of the Industrial complex
- Reconstruction of old Machine site and Shelters
- Establishment of Industrial Museum.
- Construction of 2 outdoor lifts to facilitate access
- Construction of sites for recreational and cultural use.