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Original Articles

The Reuse of Water Towers

Pages 23-37 | Published online: 16 Jan 2014

Notes

  • Information from Portsmouth Water.
  • Information from Warwickshire Museum Sites and Monuments Record Officer.
  • Information from Shropshire County Council Library.
  • Monuments Protection Programme, Step 3 Report, Water and Sewage Industries, September 2000.
  • National Monument Record Listed Buildings Database, UID 106090, Volume 1790, Map Sheet No 2, Item No 69.
  • ‘Historic Concrete Number 8’, Concrete, April 1975, p. 33.
  • The National Trust Magazine, Autumn 1998, p. 9.
  • From information gathered by the author on site in 1997. It is possible that there were perceived to be insurance problems in allowing public access to the upper platform.
  • Gould, M.H. and Barton, B.M.J. ‘Early Reinforced Concrete Water Towers, 1900–1930’. Trans. Newcomen Society, Vol. 71, 1999–2000, pp. 269–81, Figure 6.
  • Coventry Evening Telegraph, 27 January 1999, p. 7.
  • Balchin, N. and Filby, P. A Guide to the Industrial Archaeology of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. Association of Industrial Archaeology (2001), p. 20.
  • National Monument Record Listed Buildings Database UID 78823, Volume No 1038, Map Sheet No 5, Item No 45.
  • Architectural Design, Vol65,No l/2,Jan/Feb. 1995, p. xxiv. Beard, E. ‘Munstead Water Tower’. Building, Vol. 259,11 March 1994, p. 9.
  • ‘It's a High Life for the “Yanks in the Tank’”, Newmarket Times, 27 May 1980.
  • Tate, A., ‘Converted Water Tower’, Guardian Space, 22 April 1999, p. 9.
  • The Independent On Sunday, 18 June 1995. Internal views are also shown. See also The Scotsman, 13 April 2001.
  • Beard, E. ‘My Tower’, Architects Journal, Vol. 200, No 22,8 December 1994, p. 54.
  • Information from West Lancashire District Council Conservation Officer, 8 January 1996.
  • The Times, 30 June 1993. There is reference to ‘other redundant water towers having been converted into hotels and tourist attractions’. The author is not aware of a hotel conversion in the British Isles.
  • Independent on Sunday, 18 June 1995, p. 81.
  • Daily Telegraph Weekend, 4 October 1997.
  • Coventry Evening Telegraph, 27 January 1999.
  • Cambridge Evening News, 20 February 1974.
  • Slavid, R., ‘Turning a Disused Reservoir into a Family Home’, The Architects' Journal, Vol. 197, No 23,9 June 1993, p. 38. Work was then about to commence.
  • Apparently, one of only a few companies that specialize in converting unusual buildings.
  • Relph-Knight, L., ‘A Folly Revived’, Buildings, Vol. 246, No 7340, April 1984, p. 34. The use of the word ‘folly’ is, perhaps, unfortunate as this structure had been a working tower and definitely not a folly.
  • Notes provided by Swale District Council.
  • Unresolved at the time of writing.
  • McAngus, J., ‘Praying for Jumbo’, Water Bulletin, No 383,3 November 1989, p. 7.
  • Independent on Sunday, 18 June 1995, p. 81. Also referred to on TV programme One Foot in the Past as ‘Ruin of the Week’ (August 1996).
  • Information on tower supplied by Bristol Water Company, who have issued two volumes on their history (the first of which is not readily available).
  • Built 1860–61 to designs by the eminent Victorian engineer, Robert Rawlinson. Humbers, W., Treatise on Water Supply, Crosby Lockwood (1876).
  • ‘Dark Lane Water Tower, Wellington’, Bulletin Somerset Industrial Archaeology Society, December 1995, p. 15.
  • Redwood, F., ‘A Problem Home with a Silver Lining’, The Sunday Times, 1 October 2000, p. 4 (Property).
  • Hanson, M., ‘Converting a Pool with a View’, Country Life, 20 September 1979, p. 892.
  • ‘Norfolk Landmark: Appleton Water Tower’, Building Refurbishment and Maintenance, Vol. 2, April 1980, pp. 32–3. Notes prepared by Landmark Trust (who now rent out the building; the tank itself appears to be inaccessible).
  • ‘Prize Winning Tower’, Maidstone Star, 12 November 1998.
  • ‘Magnificent Home was once a Water Tower’, Cambridge Evening News, 25 September 1982. This also shows internal views of three rooms.
  • Prepared by David Spencer Partnership, Architects, York, for outline planning permission.
  • When built, this type of tower had a domed (up) floor and central access through the tank, which would have to be cut away.
  • ‘Water-tower above the Thames’, House and Garden, Vol. 41, No 3, March 1986, pp. 136–43.
  • This was the second attempt at conversion, the first not having been completed. Shown unaltered in The Water Heritage, Water Authorities Association, London, 1987, pp. 26–7. Shown converted in recent publicity material issued by Furness Brick Company.

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