|
The Wapping Hydraulic Power Station (built 1890) was originally run by the London Hydraulic Power Company in Wapping, London, England. Originally it operated using steam, and was later converted to use electricity. It was used to power machinery, including lifts, across London. The Tower Subway was used to transfer the power, and steam, to districts south of the river. The surviving complex consists of the engine house, boiler house, water tank, accumulator tower, reservoir, foreman's house, seven 1950s throw ram pumps, a 1950s pilot accumulator, two cranes, two transformers and switchgear. After its closure as a pumping station in 1977, the building was converted and reopened by Jules Wright as an arts centre (Wapping Project Bankside) and restaurant (Wapping Food). It held its first exhibition in 1993, and opened in a new form in 2000.〔 Exhibitions were held in the basement and the main ground floor hall housed the restaurant, with some of the original equipment still in place. The building was designated a grade II * listed building in December 1977. In 2013, the building was sold to developers Real Estate Ltd.〔 In early 2014 the lease for the space came to an end and the arts spaced moved to 37 Dover Street, Mayfair. On the opposite side of the road, Wapping Wall, is a notable public house, the The Prospect of Whitby, on the northern bank of the River Thames. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Wapping Hydraulic Power Station」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|