EPW046135 ENGLAND (1934). The Nottingham and Derby Power Company Spondon Power Station, Spondon, 1934

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (7)

EPW046135
  0° 0m
EPW046134
  162° 13m
EPW046138
  148° 26m
EPW046137
  99° 62m
EPW046133
  94° 68m
EPW046136
  98° 78m
EPW046132
  221° 221m

Details

Title [EPW046135] The Nottingham and Derby Power Company Spondon Power Station, Spondon, 1934
Reference EPW046135
Date September-1934
Link
Place name SPONDON
Parish
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 440422, 334425
Longitude / Latitude -1.3989304922605, 52.905417990305
National Grid Reference SK404344

Pins

Low-lying land used for dumping power station ash and waste from B C L. All the low-lands were eventually built on as the ground level was raised and the factory became busier.

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:38:16 AM
Low lying land. Used for land-fill for some waste produce from the B C L works and for power station ash.

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:35:24 AM
29 Plant, British Celanese Limited. This was the main engineering workshop for the British Celanese Limited site.

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:32:58 AM
Anglers Lane rail crossing on L M S (Ex Midland Railway) rail crossing.

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:31:37 AM
Original 'Anglers Arms' public House.

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:29:04 AM
Coal drops. It is difficult to see how the coal was moved into the power station.

Maurice
Friday 21st of June 2013 06:56:45 AM
The coal was brought in via the Midland railway sidings at Spondon station and the reception sidings within the British Celanese site. British Celanese originally built, and owned,the power station before selling it to the Nottingham and Derby Power Company.

(Enter Spondon or British Celanese into the search box for more).

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:26:46 AM
Two foot, narrow gauge track from the boiler house to the ash tip. Probably portable track that could be easily moved as the ash heap became 'full'. Power station ash soon moved from being waste product to being the raw material for building blocks.

Maurice
Friday 21st of June 2013 06:54:38 AM
Spondon power station ash was used to infill the lower level land within the British Celanese factory site. This was then built on.

Triggy
Thursday 27th of February 2014 11:40:22 AM