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Temple Mills

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Temple Mills is a northerly part of Stratford, south of Leyton, located within the London borough of Newham in East London

Today, Temple Mills is surrounded at present by former railway tracks and works belonging to the Great Eastern Railway, but a small maintenance depot for EWS and Railtrack still exists today. Temple Mills Lane is to the north of the London 2012 Olympic Park

History

The mills

Medieval Hackney was almost entirely rural and so agriculture and related trades were the main forms of employment. Arable crops were grown, such as beans, wheat, oats and barley. This created a need for milling of the grain, and there were several mills in Hackney. Temple Mills were water mills belonging to the Knights Templar, used mainly for grinding corn from their extensive lands in Homerton and the Marshes. The mills straddled the River Lee and so were partly in Hackney and partly in Leyton [1].

During the 17th century and 18th century, the former Templar mills were used for a variety of industrial purposes. These included grinding rapeseed for oil, processing leather, making brass kettles, twisting yarn, and manufacturing sheet lead.[2]

Railway works

Modern Stratford was built as a 'new town' initially called "Hudson' Town" after George Hudson the railway entrepreneur and it was the location of the Eastern Counties Railway's and then the Great Eastern Railway's railway works. Located at Temple Mills, the first locomotives built in 1850, were passenger tank locomotives, designed by J.V.Gooch, brother of the GWR's Daniel Gooch. There was also the first recorded attempt at a Compound locomotive using a modified two-cylinder goods engine. The works was the primary locomotive building plant for the GER, but after the grouping it was wound down by the LNER and its main occupation was then repairs and major overhauls, and as a carriage works. As Temple Mills is located in part of the Lower Lea Valley, it was often subject to flooding [3]. The main depot and works closed in 1963, and the remaining diesel repair shop closed in 1991.

Eurostar depot

Temple Mills is the site of the £402 million replacement maintenance depot for all Eurostar sets in the UK. Located near Stratford International and on the edge of the Olympic Park, it will replace the existing North Pole depot from summer 2007, with operations to coincide with the opening of the new international terminal at St Pancras railway station. 51°33′36.4″N 0°1′21.8″W / 51.560111°N 0.022722°W / 51.560111; -0.022722

Temple Mills depot is designed to house 8 train-roads [4] The overall dimensions of the 8-road shed is just under 450m long by 64m wide, with a floor to ceiling height of approximately 12m. High level walkways in the trusses provide access to the shed services and facilities [5]

A view of developments at Temple Mills can be accessed via Leyton tube station [6]

Future

From 2007 Stratford will be the location of Stratford International station on High Speed 1, the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, and in 2012 the location of the main Olympic Park, which will contain a significant number of venues to be used in the 2012 Summer Olympics, including the Olympic Stadium, Aquatics Centre, and London Velopark.

Stratford has been a focus of regeneration for some years and as of 2006 the seventy three hectare brownfield railway lands to the north of the town centre and station are to be redeveloped in a multi-billion pound scheme called Stratford City, centred on Temple Mills. This will form a new purpose-built community of 5,000 homes, offices, retail spaces, schools, public spaces, municipal and other facilities. It is hoped that this will become a major metropolitan centre for East London. Part of Stratford City will serve as the Olympic Village

References