Crossness Pumping Station (London)
| museum, Romanesque (architecture), Grade I Listed (UK), sewage pumping station
United Kingdom /
England /
Dartford /
London /
Belvedere Road
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ Dartford
World / United Kingdom / England
museum, Romanesque (architecture), Grade I Listed (UK), sewage pumping station
The Crossness Pumping Station was built by Sir Joseph Bazalgette as part of Victorian London's urgently needed main sewerage system. It was officially opened by the Prince of Wales in April 1865.
The pumping station The Beam Engine House is a Grade 1 Listed Industrial Building constructed in the Romanesque style and features some of the most spectacular ornamental Victorian cast ironwork to be found today. It also contains the four original pumping engines (although the cylinders were upgraded in 1901), which are possibly the largest remaining rotative beam engines in the world, with 52 ton flywheels and 47 ton beams. Although modern diesel engines were subsequently introduced, the old beam engines remained in service until work on a new sewerage treatment plant commenced in 1956. Following abandonment in the mid 1950's, the engine house and engines were systematically vandalised and left to decay, which greatly impeded the Trust's restoration/conservation programme.
The Crossness Engines Trust, a registered charity, was set up in 1987 to restore the installation which represents a unique part of Britain's industrial heritage and an outstanding example of Victorian engineering. All the restoration work so far carried out has been done entirely by an unpaid volunteer workforce.
www.crossness.org.uk/
www.bexley.gov.uk/article/10661/Crossness
www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-198633-crossness-pu...
The pumping station The Beam Engine House is a Grade 1 Listed Industrial Building constructed in the Romanesque style and features some of the most spectacular ornamental Victorian cast ironwork to be found today. It also contains the four original pumping engines (although the cylinders were upgraded in 1901), which are possibly the largest remaining rotative beam engines in the world, with 52 ton flywheels and 47 ton beams. Although modern diesel engines were subsequently introduced, the old beam engines remained in service until work on a new sewerage treatment plant commenced in 1956. Following abandonment in the mid 1950's, the engine house and engines were systematically vandalised and left to decay, which greatly impeded the Trust's restoration/conservation programme.
The Crossness Engines Trust, a registered charity, was set up in 1987 to restore the installation which represents a unique part of Britain's industrial heritage and an outstanding example of Victorian engineering. All the restoration work so far carried out has been done entirely by an unpaid volunteer workforce.
www.crossness.org.uk/
www.bexley.gov.uk/article/10661/Crossness
www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-198633-crossness-pu...
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossness_Pumping_Station
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 51°30'32"N 0°8'18"E
- Thames Water Board Pumping station 10 km
- Sewage pumping station 1279 km
- Chimney 1279 km
- Water treatment site 1308 km
- Sewage pumping station 1338 km
- KNS 3"A" and TP-94 1362 km
- Cold War bunker protection level 3 1399 km
- Pumping station 1432 km
- Przepompownia ścieków oczyszczalni "Południe" 1435 km
- Pumping station 2011 km
- Thamesmead 1.8 km
- Belvedere 2.1 km
- Bexleyheath 5.1 km
- London Borough of Bexley 5.4 km
- Welling 5.5 km
- London Borough of Newham 7.6 km
- Royal Borough of Greenwich 7.8 km
- Eltham 8.4 km
- London Borough of Havering 8.8 km
- Kent 54 km