Jumbo Water Tower: Difference between revisions
m Reverted edits by Illuminator68 to last revision by XLinkBot (HG) |
More concise and relevant text~~~~ |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Jumbo.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Jumbo]] |
[[Image:Jumbo.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Jumbo]] |
||
'''Jumbo Water Tower''' is a local name for the [[water tower]] at the Balkerne Gate in [[Colchester]], [[Essex]], [[England]] |
'''Jumbo Water Tower''' is a local name for the [[water tower]] at the Balkerne Gate in [[Colchester]], [[Essex]], [[England]]. In 1882 the Reverend John Irvine was much annoyed that the huge tower would dwarf his nearby rectory, and labelled it "Jumbo" after the London Zoo elephant as a term of derision. |
||
Construction took around 20 months (the gestation period of an elephant) and was completed in 1883. 1,200,000 bricks and 819 tons of stone and cement were used in the construction of the tower. The tank is constructed of cast-iron bolted panels, and when it was in use could hold 1069 cubic metres (37,800 cubic ft) of water. Jumbo was claimed at the time to be the second largest water tower in England. |
|||
Inside are 157 steps to a |
Inside the central pier are 157 steps to a cupola which at 35.37 metres (116 ft) above ground offers views a long way over Colchester and the surrounding area. |
||
After a century of service the water tower became superfluous to the water supply system and was sold off by Anglian Water in 1987. It has had multiple owners since. In 2001 after prolonged controversy permission was granted on appeal to replace the tank with a glass walled penthouse, but work on this never started and permission expired. In 2006 at the height of the UK property boom, Jumbo was sold at auction for £330,000 to a local developer. In 2008 a local charity was formed with the aim of restoring the Grade II* listed tower and making it a heritage attraction with guided public access. |
|||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
*[[Tower Hill Water Tower]], a water tower of similar design in [[Ormskirk]], [[Lancashire]] |
*[[Tower Hill Water Tower]], a water tower of similar design in [[Ormskirk]], [[Lancashire]] |
||
*[http://bwtas.blogspot.com/2008/07/intoduction.html The British Water Tower Appreciation Society] |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{commonscat|Jumbo Water Tower}} |
{{commonscat|Jumbo Water Tower}} |
||
*[http://www.jumbo.uk.com Official Jumbo website] |
*[http://www.jumbo.uk.com Official Jumbo website] |
||
*[http://www.savejumbo.org.uk |
*[http://www.savejumbo.org.uk Balkerne Tower Trust] |
||
{{coord|51.8896|0.8951|type:landmark_region:GB-ESS|display=title}} |
{{coord|51.8896|0.8951|type:landmark_region:GB-ESS|display=title}} |
Revision as of 23:46, 17 March 2010
Jumbo Water Tower is a local name for the water tower at the Balkerne Gate in Colchester, Essex, England. In 1882 the Reverend John Irvine was much annoyed that the huge tower would dwarf his nearby rectory, and labelled it "Jumbo" after the London Zoo elephant as a term of derision.
Construction took around 20 months (the gestation period of an elephant) and was completed in 1883. 1,200,000 bricks and 819 tons of stone and cement were used in the construction of the tower. The tank is constructed of cast-iron bolted panels, and when it was in use could hold 1069 cubic metres (37,800 cubic ft) of water. Jumbo was claimed at the time to be the second largest water tower in England.
Inside the central pier are 157 steps to a cupola which at 35.37 metres (116 ft) above ground offers views a long way over Colchester and the surrounding area.
After a century of service the water tower became superfluous to the water supply system and was sold off by Anglian Water in 1987. It has had multiple owners since. In 2001 after prolonged controversy permission was granted on appeal to replace the tank with a glass walled penthouse, but work on this never started and permission expired. In 2006 at the height of the UK property boom, Jumbo was sold at auction for £330,000 to a local developer. In 2008 a local charity was formed with the aim of restoring the Grade II* listed tower and making it a heritage attraction with guided public access.
See also
- Tower Hill Water Tower, a water tower of similar design in Ormskirk, Lancashire
- The British Water Tower Appreciation Society