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Abbey Mills Pumping Stations : ウィキペディア英語版 | Abbey Mills Pumping Station
The original Abbey Mills Pumping Station, in Abbey Lane, London, is a sewage pumping station, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver. It was built between 1865 and 1868, housing eight beam engines by Rothwell & Co. of Bolton. Two engines on each arm of a cruciform plan, with an elaborate Byzantine style, described as ''The Cathedral of Sewage''. Another of Bazalgette's designs, Crossness Pumping Station, is located south of the River Thames at Crossness, at the end of the Southern Outfall Sewer. A modern pumping station (F Station) was completed in 1997〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=ABBEY MILLS PUMPING STATION - Allies and Morrison )〕 about 200m south of the original station. ==History== The pumping station was built at the site of an earlier watermill owned by the former Stratford Langthorne Abbey, from which it gained its name. It was first recorded as ''Wiggemulne'' in 1312, i.e., "the mill of a man called Wicga", an Old English personal name, and subsequently became associated with the abbey. The Abbey lay between the Channelsea River and Marsh Lane (Manor Road). It was dissolved in 1538. By 1840, the North Woolwich railway ran through the site, and it began to be used to establish factories, and ultimately the sewage pumping stations.〔(West Ham: Stratford Abbey, A History of the County of Essex ): Volume 6 (1973), pp. 112–14. Retrieved 20 February 2007〕
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