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Featured Report - - Jumping Jack Flash – UK Industry ( AKA Gas Holder Porn )– 1700’s -2022 | Noteworthy Reports | Page 6 | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Featured Report - Jumping Jack Flash – UK Industry ( AKA Gas Holder Porn )– 1700’s -2022

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Ojay

Admin
Staff member
Admin
Good to finally see an update on this lot, they really are cracking on this past 12 months up and down the country now, thing is, they are still struggling to dispose of prime land which beggars belief really considering some of the locations, I guess much legal red tape etc etc before housing and so on..
 

Calamity Jane

i see beauty in the unloved, places & things
Regular User
Astounding work. Kudos for this. Fascinating work, I may have missed it in the write up, but how long did all this take? and how long did the thread take to report. Thats what you call epic, and noteworthy. :thumb
 

mockney reject

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
Astounding work. Kudos for this. Fascinating work, I may have missed it in the write up, but how long did all this take? and how long did the thread take to report. Thats what you call epic, and noteworthy. :thumb


Visiting the first 100 took roughly 8 months, the second lot were much more leisurely and done if we happened to be near them.

As for writing up I did bits as I went along, I had a fair bit of help from @LadyJayne with the history bits and RA helped with proof reading and picture choice, I guess a few weeks of evenings.

Thanks for your comments :)
 

DE-eVOLVED

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Wow !!! Awesome job !!...thats was so fact packed and a joy to read... I actually planned to do the one in Elm Rd a few weeks ago...but to my dismay and lack of intel at the time the lot appeared empty, still fenced and a huge security cam on it... but all traces of the gas tower are either long gone or hidden from plain sight from Elm rd. side looking in.
 

mockney reject

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
In the words of the slightly insane Britney Spears...

Oops I did it again..

75) Grangetown Works – Ferry Road – Cardiff 6 Holders

The Cardiff Gas Light and Coke Company was formed in 1837. Chaired by former (and future) Cardiff mayor Charles Crofts Williams, the initial gasworks were opened on Whitmore Lane (now Bute Terrace), in the city centre. The modern day site comprises of a series of hotels and the Porter’s bar. The gas works thrived, and as the Cardiff suburbs expanded throughout the 1800’s, so too did the need for gas. More land was acquired in the Grangetown suburb at some point in 1859, and four years later the Grangetown arm of the gas works was opened, connected to its sister site via an 18 inch main. Within seven years, the newer suburbs of Cardiff (Cogan, Whitchurch, Radyr and St. Fagans) all used the gas supplied by the works, and the need arose for it to expand further. Adjacent land on Grange Farm was purchased, and duly used to expand the works.

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The works were not universally popular. There was some opposition to the price of gas, while others locally in 1869 complained to Parliament at the time of the Cardiff Gas Bill about the smell. Mr Salt, a local builder, said lots of tenants had given notice – some leaving without paying rent. A local vicar and schoolmaster also objected. Even the company’s own history in the 1930’s admits that workers in the early days toiled “in dusty, dirty and confined conditions,” as they handled coal and ashes by hand. Later the works would become more automated. The works had five gas holders, the largest with a 1.5 million cubic ft. capacity.

The Gasholder and its support frame were built for Cardiff Gas Light and Coke Company in 1881. Dated by an inscription on the makers plate mounted on frame, 'J & W Horton 1881 Smethwick'.

The gasworks was not without its dramatic incidents. The adjacent rope yard at Cardiff Rope Works was set alight by embers from a passing train in the early hours of 18th July 1886. The fire caused a large amount of damage to the Rope Works, but the gasworks was unscathed, fortunately.

The works survived the First World War with little incident, but a memorial plaque was commissioned to commemorate the lives of the gas workers who were lost in the war, and it remained on site until the 1990’s.

The works itself had a close brush with fate during World War II. At 6:37pm, on 2nd January 1941, German bombers began a 10 hour raid on Cardiff, involving about a hundred aircraft. Grangetown was amongst the earliest and worst hit areas.

The death toll across the city that night saw an estimated 165 dead, 427 hurt and nearly 350 homes destroyed or had to be demolished. Seven were killed at the corner of Ferry Road and Holmesdale Street, including brothers Ivor and William Dix – both married men, one 29 and the other 34. James Griffiths, a special sergeant, who lived in Cambridge Street, had gone into one of the homes demolished by a bomb and brought out the body of a dead boy and an injured girl, crying for her mother. The girl died within hours and it was months before the body of her mother was found deep in the rubble. Sgt Griffiths, who also spent three days helping to dig at the wreckage of the Hollyman’s shelter, was called to deal with many incendiary bombs in the Grangetown and Docks areas. He was awarded a BEM by King George later that year. His widow Elizabeth recalled 40 years later that the experience of civilian casualties for this Great War veteran took its toll and he died in 1952. “All he did was wander around in a daze,” she recalled of the aftermath.

Although the gasworks had suffered some damage during the war years, repairs took place and production continued apace. In 1948, during the aftermath of World War II, the company was nationalised, and become the Wales Gas Board.

The gas works continued its operation, and demand for gas was such that in 1963, a century after it first opened, the Grangetown gasworks expanded once more.

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The early 1970’s saw a further restructuring of the UK’s gas industries, and the twelve different gas boards (of which the Wales Gas Board was a member) were consolidated under the British Gas Corporation. Unfortunately, as with a lot of the nationalised UK industries, the privatisations of the mid 1980’s led the works into a gradual decline and the operation was finally wound up by Wales and West Utilities in the mid 1990’s. All told, the gas works had supplied Cardiff and its surrounding suburbs for 130 years. The memorial plaque was removed by a worker during the shutdown, and kept safe in a residential property for several years before being unearthed and re-displayed in a local pub.

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With the shutdown and demolition of much of the site, it remained derelict until falling under the vast regeneration schemes put in place to revitalise the Cardiff dockland areas in the early 2000’s. Wales & West Utilities later commissioned environmental improvement and other restoration works including the infilling of former gas holders at Grangetown in Cardiff. The final surviving gasholder was listed as a Grade II structure by Cadw in 1992 and described as an “architectural masterpiece”. It had first been built by a West Midlands firm (J and W Horton’s) in 1881, and was based on a classical Italianate design. As the last standing gasholder of its type in Wales, QuadConsult Limited was commissioned to undertake a detailed structural and condition report of the structure, which would be later deposited in the National Library in Aberystwyth as a formal historical archive. The report noted that the gasholder had suffered some bomb damage during World War II, but had been repaired.

While the historical significance of the gasholder was being set down, an assortment of new residential flats sprung up in the area, along with retail parks. A local rubbish tip just down the road from the site had also been backfilled and repurposed as recreational land. Improved transport links into the Bay area also brought more people into the area, and it was into this environment that IKEA decided to open its first store in Wales. Proposed in March of 2001, the store finally opened in early November of 2003 (amid concerns its popularity would cause traffic gridlock into the area).

Little remains of the original gasworks today, save the imposing latticework skeleton of the gasholder, and a few crumbling boundary walls.



So the chance to climb the last surviving gas holder of this type in Wales…

Who wouldn’t climb it? After a weekend revisiting the Welsh Asylums with Rapid Ascent, @Seffy & @Katia it would have been rude not to climb this one.

It was a pretty easy access job with a simple gap in the palisade, a duck under the railing and up the ladder. It was nice to be back up a gas holder and this one was really pretty. Located next to the local Ikea which was handy as their carpark lights lit the holder up well. Looking out from the top of you could see where the other holders had been. Shame it’s now being covered in new builds and the remaining holder is slowly being hidden.

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mockney reject

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
76) Granton Gasworks – Edinburgh – 3 Holders

For centuries, lighting in buildings was by candles and later by lamps using liquid fuel such as whale oil and later paraffin. By the 1820s gas lighting was being used and gas works were built which converted coal into gas – for example at New Street, Edinburgh and Baltic Street, Leith. A system of pipes was laid under the streets to carry the gas to the buildings where it was to be used, and meters installed to measure the gas used so that customers could be correctly charged for it. The early gas lamps used flat nozzles (burners) which gave a fan-shaped flame. The gas was simply lit and the flame adjusted to burn yellow. Around 1890 a major improvement was made when Carl Auer von Welsbach introduced the incandescent mantle. This was a mesh impregnated with chemicals – 'rare earths' as they were called at the time – which glowed a brilliant white when heated. The gas flame could then be a properly adjusted efficient one, burning at an almost invisible blue inside the mantle.

The use of gas gradually increased during the 19th century and towards the end of the century was growing quite rapidly despite the availability of electric lights by this time. As well as lighting, gas was also being used by then for other purposes such as powering factory machinery by gas engines.

In the 1890s gas was being produced at:

The Edinburgh Gas Works in New Street, later replaced by a bus garage;

The Leith Gas Works, Baltic Street, now part of Keyline Builders Merchants;

Portobello Gas Works, Pipe Street, Portobello.

Edinburgh and Leith were then separate burghs, but their gas production and supply were managed by a joint board, the Edinburgh and Leith Corporations Gas Commissioners (ELCGC). Portobello was a separate burgh until 1896 but amalgamated with Edinburgh that year, following which their gas works came under the control of ELCGC.

By the 1890s these works were operating at full capacity. The New Street and Portobello sites were hemmed in by other buildings and could not be expanded. At Leith it might have been possible to expand onto an adjacent site. But it was considered that a new works on a much larger site would allow for future growth and allow modern processes to be introduced.

At a meeting on 15 February 1897 ELCGC appointed a new Chief Engineer and Manager, Walter Ralph Herring M Inst C E, at a salary of £900 per year. He came to the organisation from Huddersfield Corporation Gas Department, and had written a large (458 page) book entitled ‘The Construction of Gas Works Practically Described’. He took up his position in spring 1897.

Mr Herring seems to have started work at once on proposals for a new gas works. Two sites were considered – one at the east end of Leith Docks and one at Granton.

Town gas is produced by the ‘gasification’ of coal in retorts, a process which produces gas, coke and also various by-products such as coal-tar and ammonia.

Large quantities of coal were required, and in the days before road transport as we know it today rail access was therefore essential. (By 1926, Granton Gas Works was using 200,000 tons of coal a year.) The existing Edinburgh and Leith works both had rail access, but only from the North British Railway (NBR), and a factor if favour of Granton was access both from the NBR and its rival, the Caledonian Railway (CR). In addition, it was close to the sea so that supplies could be brought by boat – useful in the event of strikes on the railway. The ELCGC thought of building their own small harbour at Granton, but this did not go ahead.

Following negotiation with the 6th Duke of Buccleuch, a 106¼ acre site at Granton which had formed part of his estate was purchased for £124,000.

At the time, the site was in Midlothian, not in either Edinburgh or Leith. Subsequent expansion of the city boundaries in 1900, when the Gas Works was still under construction, brought it into Edinburgh. Edinburgh and Leith subsequently amalgamated in 1920 and the gas undertaking passed to Edinburgh Corporation.

The works were carefully laid out, with ease of transport in mind. Work started in October 1898 and was largely complete by 1902 when the official opening by Mrs Steel, wife of the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, assisted by Mrs Mackie, wife of the Provost of Leith, took place and production started on 21 October 1902. Further work was done from 1903 to 1910.

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The design for the gas works allowed for considerable future expansion, and was never fully built.

The main entrance was on West Granton Road, where offices were also constructed. To the north of that were buildings containing the coal store and, adjacent to that, the retort house where the actual gas production took place. These buildings were in a distinctive style and constructed mainly of red brick, with stone used for some of the details. The front of the plant house, attached to the coal store, featured a decorative roof in the form of a truncated pyramid.

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To the north of these buildings was the purifying plant and smaller buildings containing the meter house, in which were two large meters, and the pumping station, to move gas through the pipes.

Further north was the gasholder. Only one was initially built, although eight were allowed for in the initial design. (Had they all been built, Granton House would have had to be demolished.) The gasholder is now a listed building.

To the east of the retort house was the railway station. The building there also contained the time office – workers were required to pass through turnstiles on their way into and out of the works. This building also contained lavatories, bathrooms, and lockers for the men to store their outdoor clothing. A footbridge over the railway lines led to the works itself.

The total cost of the works, excluding the Products Works was £450,000.

Granton Gas Works was not in the centre of the area it served. At the same time as it was being built, new pipes were laid to carry the gas to where it would be used. The largest of these was four feet in diameter (1219mm) and ran from Granton under the streets to Canonmills, where there was a ‘gas station’ with a number of gasholders in two groups, one east of Inverleith Row and one west. From there, smaller pipes took the gas to other gas stations, and to the customers. A pump at Granton Gas Works, driven by a gas engine, kept up pressure in the pipe network.

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The four foot (48”) main was 4412 yards long (over 2½ miles / 4 km) and cost £31,850-18-0 (£31,850.90) to construct.

A 24” main from Crewe Toll to Morningside Place, 6949 yards long, cost £14,761-16-8½ (£14,761.83) and a further 15” main from Ferry Road to Craighall Road, 2539 yards, cost £2818-15-6½ (£2,817.78).

The main gas stations were located at:

Canongate (opposite the present Royal Mile Primary School)

Holyrood Road (near Holyrood Park entrance)

Portobello (at gas works, between Pipe Street and Tower Street)

Blandfield (on Broughton Road, opposite Powderhall refuse depot)

The Canonmills site is now occupied by office buildings used until recently by Standard Life. The section of pipe near the Granton Gas Works was removed a few years ago as part of the preparatory work to allow new development in the area.

Ownership of the gas works was as follows:

Edinburgh & Leith Corporations Gas Commissioners – construction – 1920

Edinburgh Corporation 1920 – 1949

Scottish Gas Board 1949-1973

British Gas 1973-closure (BG subsequently ceased to exist 1997)

Over the years, various additions and alterations were made. The most obvious were the additions in 1930 of Gasholder No 2 and in 1966 of Gasholder No 3. These did not follow the design of Gasholder No 1. Gasholder No 1 was a waterless gasholder, 165 feet high with a capacity of 5 million cubic feet; Gasholder No 3 was 275 feet high.

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Other buildings were added in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s and in the 1960s the works were adapted to deal with natural gas piped from the North Sea via Grangemouth. A major appliance conversion programme, to allow gas customers to use natural gas, took place with the changeover from manufactured to natural gas.

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Manufacture of gas at Granton finally came to an end in 1987. The gasholders continued in use for storage for a few more years, Gasholder No 1, although the oldest, remaining in use longest – until 2001.

Demolition of redundant buildings and removal of equipment had started well before that, but after closure the site was largely cleared. Gasholder No 3 was demolished in 2003, and Gasholder No 2 in 2004. Gasholder No 1 is reportedly also threatened with demolition even though it has listed status.



Yeah it kinda happened again, ooopps! Sorry not Sorry

A post-Christmas & New Year trip to Edinburgh was on the cards, booked by the ever awesome missus. Just a few days away relaxing after the manic Christmas period and to ease us both into going back to work.

No Exploring!

Well I’d already had a look to see what was there and the pickings were pretty slim, however I did notice the big blue bad boy on the coast. I’d secretly packed my exploring gear including my new 28DL top ( available here kids www.28dl.uk go on buy one, this place doesn’t run itself ) and I planned to go climb its 157ft of gorgeous rusting metal whilst the missus was asleep. After all it wasn’t far from our hotel and the bus/tram system up there is pretty awesome. But that kinda went out the window on the morning we flew up when she confessed to packing her exploring clothes too

Lol

I fucking love my missus!

I mean the whole situation was made worse by the fact we actual flew past the gasholder on the way into the airport.

Some might call that fate.

We are getting pretty handy at climbing these now but I won’t lie, this one was a toughie. You see most holders the ladders only have a stop at each level. This one has stops halfway between each level, this plays with your head a little and by the time I was one ladder short from the top I could feel my lunch doing funny things in my tummy. I relaxed and made the climb to the very ornate top level and snapped some pics.

Enjoy people

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Mikeymutt🐶

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Nice addition to this great set. When up in Scotland I often pass a pair together just outside Glasgow. I always think about you climbing them as they are lovely.
 

Calamity Jane

i see beauty in the unloved, places & things
Regular User
Thats a beauty. I was just thinking about this report the other day, as they were doing something to the one near me. I like that this one isnt green, nor wholly solid. It is very ornate.

Lol you missus sounds amazing. My hubby does that kinda thing, but finds clothes he likes and then says perfect for me to explore with you in, lol, got to love em :rofl
 

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