I hate to sound cold-hearted, but I'm less concerned about the danger at sites such as this as I am history being stolen, one brick as a time. Sometimes you either need a fence, or the ugly cement cap protecting the remains of the mill walls that was used here. I'm not sure which is worse.
GermanG,
I didn't mention it, but as fast as a brick falls someone takes it. As you said stealing history one brick at a time. In Guy's post he said "If someone gets hurt they will take it down tomorrow" now I'm afraid they will not wait for someone to get hurt, their answer will just be, no repair, no fence, just knock it down and the problem is gone.
As for the concrete cap on the walls, I always thought it was to protect the walls from erosion, maybe both. Erosion protection is working, but as you can see in the pictures below, it is not stopping the stealing of the blocks of bog iron.
Maybe the answer is to bury it in 20 tons of sand like the Bailey house (see below). Don
Stones stolen from the cotton mill wall.
Large areas removed form walls
Don't know what the idea is here?
The Bailey House, Last state project at Atsion
The Bailey House today. The sand must work, there has been no stone removed from the site.