Crossness Pumping Station

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Crossness Pumping Station

Kent

Exterior of Crossness Pumping Station.JPG
Western exterior of the Crossness Pumping Station
Location
Grid reference: TQ48508108
Location: 51°30’33"N, 0°8’18"E
History
Built 1859–1865
Information

The Crossness Pumping Station is a former sewage pumping station designed by the Metropolitan Board of Works's chief engineer Sir Joseph Bazalgette and architect Charles Henry Driver at the eastern end of the Southern Outfall Sewer and the Ridgeway path, by the Thames in northern Kent.

The station was built between 1859 and 1865 by William Webster, as part of Bazalgette's redevelopment of the London sewerage system, it features spectacular ornamental cast ironwork, that Nikolaus Pevsner described as "a masterpiece of engineering – a Victorian cathedral of ironwork".[1]

The building is a Grade II listed building.[2]

It is adjacent to Erith Marshes, a grazing marsh, the northern part of which is designated as Crossness Nature Reserve. This provides a valuable habitat for creatures ranging from moths to small amphibians and water voles.[3]

Opening

The Southern Outfall Works, as the complex was originally called, was officially opened on 4 April 1865, by Edward, Prince of Wales, attended by Prince Alfred, the Duke of Cambridge, Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York and the Lord Mayor of London, and many other persons of rank.[4]

Following an address by Joseph Bazalgette, the Royal party toured the works and reservoirs, and the Prince then turned the wheel which started the engines and, as the Illustrated London News observed, "a sensible vibration was felt throughout the building, showing that the enormous beams, lifting-rods and flywheels were in operation."[5]

Operation

At Crossness, the incoming liquid was raised some 30 to 40 feet by the application of four large steam driven pumps. The engines were of enormous size and power. They were built by James Watt & Co. to Joseph Bazalgette's designs and specification, and were named "Victoria", "Prince Consort", "Albert Edward" and "Alexandra".[6]

Interior of the pumping station

At 11 revolutions per minute, 6 tons (approximately 1,500 gallons) of sewage per stroke per engine were pumped up into a 27 million gallon reservoir, and was released into the Thames during the ebbing tide.[6][7] The steam required to power these engines was raised by 12 Cornish boilers with single "straight-through" flues situated in the Boiler House to the south of the Engine House, and which consumed 5,000 tons of Welsh coal annually.[6]

The Crossness Works merely disposed of raw sewage into the river seawards, and in 1882, a Royal Commission recommended that the solid matter in the sewage should be separated out, and that only the liquid portion remaining should be allowed, as a temporary measure, to pass into the river. In 1891, sedimentation tanks were added to the works, and the sludge was carried by steam boats and dumped further out into the estuary, at sea.[6]

During the 1880s, chemical engineer William Webster developed a system for the electrolytic purification of sewage (patent application filed on 22 December 1887, trialled in 1888 at the Southern Outfall works[8][9] which had been built by his father's firm over 20 years earlier.

By 1897, additional pumping capacity was needed, and four extra pumps operated by triple-expansion steam engines were installed in an extension, designed to fit in with Bazalgette's main engine house, to the north of the older building. Later, in 1899, a further increase in London's population necessitated an increase in the efficiency of the original Watt engines, and considerable alteration to their design was carried out by Goodfellow & Co of Hyde, Manchester, for London County Council. They were converted from simple to compound engines with the original single cylinders were augmented by high and intermediate pressure cylinders. The additional steam required was provided by replacing the earlier Cornish boilers by more efficient Lancashire boilers with double flues and in 1901 the improved engines were fully working.[6]

In 1913, the triple expansion steam engines were replaced by diesel engines, which are still to be seen in the triple expansion engine house, and by 1956, the Watt-Goodfellow engines had been decommissioned, (Prince Consort having been temporarily put back in steam in 1953 to assist with draining the flooding of the eastern Royal Arsenal and Abbey Wood) and were left, with the rest of the ironwork, to rust and to vandals.[6]

Restoration

The Prince Consort pumping engine
Elaborate decorative ironwork in the Octagon

The pumping station became a Grade I listed building[10] in 1970 and will remain on the Heritage at Risk Register until the restoration is completed.[11] The Crossness Engines Trust, a registered charity, was formed in 1987 to oversee the restoration project[12] which was due to be completed in 2013.

When the pumping station was decommissioned in the 1950s, it was not considered economic to dismantle the engines, as the cost of doing so far exceeded any scrap value. The more valuable metal items (made from brass), such as the engine oilers, much pipework, and even the handrails from the stairs, were removed. The remaining building and engines were left to suffer considerable vandalism and decay.

As Prince Consort was the last steam engine decommissioned, in 1953, it is this engine on which the restoration activity has been concentrated. After some fifteen years of effort the engine is now working again and is run on the open days organised by the Trust.

When the buildings were abandoned, the pumps and culverts and all the subterranean areas below the Beam Engine House were filled with sand to reduce the risks from methane. This has meant that some 100 tons of this sand has had to be excavated from around and underneath the pumps before there was any hope of moving the beam and flywheel. Further, there was a considerable ingress of rain water which resulted in serious rusting of the engine parts.

The station contains the four original pumping engines, which are thought to be the largest remaining rotative beam engines in the world, with 52-ton flywheels and 47-ton beams. Although the engines are original, they are not in their original 1864 configuration, as all four were converted from single-cylinder to triple-expansion operation in 1901 and 1902. Prince Consort was returned to steam in 2003 and now runs on Trust Open Days. The other engines are not in working order, although work has begun on the restoration of Victoria.

The original boilers did not survive and Prince Consort is now steamed by a small 'off the shelf' boiler. This boiler has nowhere near the steam capacity of the originals, but this is not a problem as the engine no longer operates under load.

In popular culture

The pumping station has been used as a filming location on numerous occasionsm including:

  • Sherlock Holmes, the 2009 film[13]
  • The Crimson Petal and the White (2011, BBC)[14]
  • Seven Wonders of the Industrial World: The Sewer King (2003 BBC television episode)
  • Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey (2020)

The building was also used as the setting for the final mission of the video game The Getaway: Black Monday.[15]

Gallery

See also

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Crossness Pumping Station)

References

  1. Crossness Engines
  2. National Heritage List 1064241: Crossness Pumping Station (Grade I listing)
  3. "Crossness Nature Reserve". Thames Water. 11 February 2013. http://www.thameswater.co.uk/about-us/3605.htm. 
  4. Crossness Pumping Station Was Opened 155 Years Ago: Tales From The Brazier's Grotto
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Official_Opening
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 "The Engines". The Crossness Engines Trust. 2012. http://www.crossness.org.uk/history/the-engines.html. 
  7. The Crossness Engines. London: The Crossness Engines Trust. 1995. 
  8. "Electrical Treatment of Sewage". The Daily Telegraph. 30 May 1889. https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DTN18890530.2.14. 
  9. Merdinger, C.J. (March–April 1953). "The Development of Modern Sewerage. Part II". The Military Engineer 45 (304): 123–127. 
  10. National Heritage List 1064241: Crossness Pumping Station (Grade I listing)
  11. Buildings at Risk Register: Crossness
  12. The Crossness Engines Trust - Registered Charity no. 297585 at the Charity Commission
  13. Plowman, Paul. "Sherlock Holmes (2009) – Blackwood descends to the sewers". http://www.british-film-locations.com/scene-1k2/Sherlock-Holmes-2009. 
  14. "What We Do – April 2011 – Crossness Engines Trust". Film London. April 2011. http://filmlondon.org.uk/what-we-do/news/location_of_the_month_2011/april2011. 
  15. "The Getaway – London gets a virtual makeover". BBC News. November 2004. https://www.bbc.co.uk/london/entertainment/getaway.shtml.