The development control committee of its local authority, Suffolk County Council (SCC), is meeting today (Thursday) to decide its fate.
Clowes has fought the planning application for a waste transfer plant that will process construction and demolition waste on the grounds that dust from the works would prove disastrous for its new factory, which it began moving into at the start of this week.
Chief executive Ian Foyster said: I have done everything I can. Now I have to wait and see. We managed to get the decision deferred pending a site visit [which took place last month] and we demonstrated well why a builders reprocessing plant shouldnt go there.
SCC minerals and waste planning manager Viv Codd has recommended it be granted planning permission subject to a number of conditions designed to control its environmental impact.
Codd said that seven of the 16 conditions imposed on the application related directly to dust.
However, Foyster commented that he couldnt see how a 2m high fence would stop dust being blown towards the Clowes factory.
If the waste transfer plant gets the go ahead, Foyster said that he would have to police the conditions that had been imposed on it very carefully.
The contents of the William Clowes Museum are to be mothballed while National Lottery funding is sought. The museum has been under threat since Clowes sold the site to Tesco in 2002.
Story by Ruth Nicholas
Have your say in the Printweek Poll
Related stories
Latest comments
"This is a repeat of what happened to 1066 Capital t/a Crystal a year ago. They also never put this company in administration.
We are all still left unable to claim the redundancy and notice pay owed..."
"Totally agree"
"Best wishes to everyone involved. Nice to have a good story to read in Printweek."
Up next...

Short-grain 48pp Lithoman still in situ
Walstead closes York, but still hopes for reprisal

No power or software needed
Tech-ni-Fold innovates with new web creaser

Start-up starts printing
Wolf & Flower blossoms following first Mimaki install

Revoria PC1120 installed