Bankside Power Station is a decommissioned electricity generating station located on the south bank of the
River Thames, in the
Bankside area of the
Borough of Southwark,
London. It generated electricity from 1891 to 1981. It was also used as a training base for electrical and mechanical student apprenticeships from all over the country. Since 2000 the building has been used to house the
Tate Modern art museum and gallery.
Pioneer station
The pioneer Bankside power station was built at Meredith Wharf Bankside in 1891.
It was owned and operated by the
City of London Electric Lighting Company
The City of London Electric Lighting Company Limited (CLELCo) was a British electricity undertaking. It was formed in July 1891 to generate and supply electricity to the City of London and part of north Southwark. It owned and operated Bankside p ...
(CLELCo) and supplied electricity to the City and to part of north
Southwark
Southwark ( ) is a district of Central London situated on the south bank of the River Thames, forming the north-western part of the wider modern London Borough of Southwark. The district, which is the oldest part of South London, developed ...
.
The generating equipment was installed by the
Brush Electrical Engineering Company and comprised two pairs of 25 kW Brush arc-lighters and two 100 kW single phase alternators generating at 2 kV and 100 Hz.
This equipment first supplied
direct current (DC) electricity to arc lamp street lights in
Queen Victoria Street on 25 June 1891.
Alternating current (AC) for domestic and commercial consumers was first supplied on 14 December 1891, this was a single-phase, 100 Hz, three-wire, 204/102 volt system.
Electricity cables were carried over
Southwark bridge and
Blackfriars bridge.
Bankside A 1893-1959
The power station, later known as Bankside A, was extended several times as the demand for electricity grew.
An engine room, 230 ft (70 m) long and 50 ft (15 m) wide, was built in 1893 with two 200 kW, two 350 kW and two 400 kW alternators driven by Willans engines. The associated boiler house was the same length and had nine
Babcock and Wilcox boilers. In 1895 the engine room was extended to 424 ft (129 m) and the boiler house to 300 ft (91 m) containing 22 boilers.
A DC supply for the printing presses of
Fleet Street
Fleet Street is a major street mostly in the City of London. It runs west to east from Temple Bar at the boundary with the City of Westminster to Ludgate Circus at the site of the London Wall and the River Fleet from which the street was na ...
was provided from a DC power house at Bankside built in 1900.
In 1901 the boiler house was doubled in width and contained 46 boilers. In the engine room there were ten
British Thomson-Houston
British Thomson-Houston (BTH) was a British engineering and heavy industrial company, based at Rugby, Warwickshire, England, and founded as a subsidiary of the General Electric Company (GE) of Schenectady, New York, United States. They were kno ...
alternators directly coupled to three-crank Willans engines, eight Brush alternators with a capacity of 3,600 kW driven by two-cylinder compound Brush engines, and two
Ferranti compound engines driving 1,500 kW alternators at 150 RPM, making an aggregate capacity of 10,500 kW. By 1907 the capacity of the station was 25,500 kW with 15,000 kW being DC machinery.
The first 2,500 kW
turbo-alternator was installed in December 1910 and a second in January 1911, others followed at nearly yearly intervals. By 1920 there were seven turbo-alternators with an aggregate capacity of 19,500 kW. Until 1919 the system of generation was 2 kV, single-phase AC, and 450 V DC, this was changed that year to 11 kV, three-phase AC. The steam conditions were also increased from 150 psi to 250 psi with superheat to .
Over the period 1921-28 a new boiler house was built alongside the east face of the power house. This had 18 boilers, the coal strike of 1921 led to six of the boilers being specified for oil firing, although two of these were later returned to coal firing.
The old boiler house and its three 150 ft (46 m) chimneys were demolished.
In 1934 Bankside was connected to London ring of the
National Grid and became a 'selected' station under the operational control of the
Central Electricity Board.
Equipment at Bankside A
Following construction of new boiler house in 1921-28, the steam plant at Bankside A throughout the remainder of its operational life comprised: twelve Babcock 50,000 lb/hr boilers (four oil-fired, eight coal-fired chain grate); four coal-fired Yarrow 65,000 lb/hr boilers; and two coal-fired Yarrow 70,000 lb/hr boilers. The operating pressure was 260 psi at 600-700 °F. The total evaporative capacity was 850,000 lb/hr. Condenser cooling water was drawn from the river Thames through a pump house located on the river bank at 7,800,000 gallons per hour.
At its peak in the 1930s the generating equipment comprised: one 5 MW, five 10 MW, two 15 MW Oerlikon and
British Thomson-Houston
British Thomson-Houston (BTH) was a British engineering and heavy industrial company, based at Rugby, Warwickshire, England, and founded as a subsidiary of the General Electric Company (GE) of Schenectady, New York, United States. They were kno ...
turbo-alternators, and one
Parsons
Parsons may refer to:
Places
In the United States:
* Parsons, Kansas, a city
* Parsons, Missouri, an unincorporated community
* Parsons, Tennessee, a city
* Parsons, West Virginia, a town
* Camp Parsons, a Boy Scout camp in the state of Washingto ...
4 MW house service set (450-500 V), total capacity 89 MW. Some of the older plant was decommissioned. By 1952 the plant comprised one 5 MW and two 10 MW Oerlikon turbo-alternators, two 10 MW and two 15 MW B.T.H. turbo-alternators and one
Parsons
Parsons may refer to:
Places
In the United States:
* Parsons, Kansas, a city
* Parsons, Missouri, an unincorporated community
* Parsons, Tennessee, a city
* Parsons, West Virginia, a town
* Camp Parsons, a Boy Scout camp in the state of Washingto ...
4 MW set.
Complaints
There were numerous complaints against the power station throughout its operational life. In October 1901 the CLELCo paid the
Corporation of Southwark £250 () in settlement of the costs of the corporation taking a smoke nuisance action against the company. In January 1903 the company was fined £20 () plus costs for "creating smoke". The CLELCo challenged some of these nuisance actions. In May 1910 an officer of the Public Control Department of the
London County Council stated that he had observed black smoke issuing from the centre chimney and "in such volumes as to constitute a nuisance". This was contested by the company which said the information was inaccurate, since this was after sunset "any vapour or gas would assume a dark appearance
€¦and the absence of light would not ensure accuracy".
The
London County Council undertook tests to measure the deposition of grit in the area during the summer of 1950. They estimated that up to 235 tons per square mile of grit was deposited in the area from Bankside ‘A’ power station during the month of September 1950.
Renewal and nationalisation
By the late 1930s Bankside was considered inefficient (in 1946 the thermal efficiency was 15.82%), old and polluting. Preliminary plans were drawn up by the CEB for a new power station, Bankside B, but World War II delayed any further redevelopment.
On 1 April 1948 the British electricity industry was nationalised, Bankside was vested in the
British Electricity Authority
The British Electricity Authority (BEA) was established as the central British electricity authority in 1948 under the nationalisation of Great Britain's electricity supply industry enacted by the Electricity Act 1947. The BEA was responsible for ...
and the electricity distribution system radiating from the power station was vested in the
London Electricity Board. Bankside A was decommissioned in March 1959 and was demolished to allow the eastern end of Bankside B to be built.
Bankside B 1947-1981
The redevelopment of Bankside power station, suspended during the war, was started again by the
City of London Electric Lighting Company
The City of London Electric Lighting Company Limited (CLELCo) was a British electricity undertaking. It was formed in July 1891 to generate and supply electricity to the City of London and part of north Southwark. It owned and operated Bankside p ...
in 1944. It developed plans for a new power station with an ultimate capacity of 300 MW and submitted these to the planning authority the
London County Council in 1944.
It was a highly controversial proposal as it continued industrialisation of the
South Bank
The South Bank is an entertainment and commercial district in central London, next to the River Thames opposite the City of Westminster. It forms a narrow strip of riverside land within the London Borough of Lambeth (where it adjoins Alber ...
which the 1943
County of London Plan has sought to redevelop with offices, flats and educational and cultural institutions.
The new Bankside B power station was approved by the
British Cabinet in April 1947.
The designation Bankside A and Bankside B was only used when both stations co-existed during the period 1947-59.
The building was designed by
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (9 November 1880 – 8 February 1960) was a British architect known for his work on the New Bodleian Library, Cambridge University Library, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, Battersea Power Station, Liverpool Cathedral, an ...
, the designer of
Liverpool Anglican Cathedral, many of the
K-series red telephone boxes, and an important consultant credited with designing the Art-deco exterior of
Battersea Power Station. Bankside is a long, 73 m (240 ft) wide,
steel framed,
brick-clad
Cladding is an outer layer of material covering another. It may refer to the following:
*Cladding (boiler), the layer of insulation and outer wrapping around a boiler shell
*Cladding (construction), materials applied to the exterior of buildings
...
building with a central chimney high. The chimney's height was less than that of
St Paul's Cathedral
St Paul's Cathedral is an Anglican cathedral in London and is the seat of the Bishop of London. The cathedral serves as the mother church of the Diocese of London. It is on Ludgate Hill at the highest point of the City of London and is a Grad ...
, which is directly opposite, but set back from, the north bank of the
Thames. The plan of the building was divided into three sections - the 85 ft (26 m) high main
turbine hall in the centre, with the
boiler house to the north and the electricity transformers and switch house to the south. Bankside B was set-back from the riverfront to allow the boulevard proposed in the
County of London Plan to be developed at a later date.
Bankside B was designed to be coal-fired but, following a coal and power shortage in early 1947, was redesigned to be oil-fired (the first such power station in Britain).
Bunker 'C' oil was delivered by barge from the
Shell Haven refinery on the Thames estuary to three large underground tanks to the south of the building. Each tank was 28 m in diameter, 7.3 m high and held 4,000 tons of oil. The oil consumption of the station at full load was 67 tons per hour.
Construction work was undertaken in two phases: 1947-52 and 1958-63.
This allowed the old Bankside A to continue in operation while the new power station was built. The western half of the building, plus the chimney, was completed first and started generating power in 1952 from four boilers and two 60 MW turbo-alternators. Bankside A was decommissioned in March 1959 and construction started on the eastern portion. This was completed December 1963 and generated electricity from one further boiler, and one 120 MW and one 60 MW turbo-alternator. The maximum total generating capacity of Bankside B was 300 MW.
Equipment at Bankside B
The specification of the boiler plant at Bankside B was as follows.
Condenser cooling water was taken from the River Thames at 10 million gallons per hour (1.07 million m
3/day). The temperature rise of the cooling water across the condensers was 15 °F (8.5 °C).
The specification of generating equipment at Bankside B was as follows.
The 120 MW turbo-alternator was in the top 20 of the most efficient of UK electricity generators between 1963-73.
The alternators were connected to 66 kV 3-phase delta-star transformers. The main 66 kV
switchgear, rated at 2,500 MVA, was on the three upper floors of the switch-house: the
circuit breakers on the upper floor, the selector switches below and the
bus-bars on the lower floor. Two 66 kV cables ran to
Battersea power station, and two to
Deptford power station. Ten 22 kV cables and twelve 11 kV cables distributed to various sub-stations of the
London Electricity Board.
Flue-gas washing
Bankside B had a flue-gas washing plant to mitigate air pollution at its central London location.
Only two British power stations had previously been fitted with such equipment:
Battersea power station and
Fulham power station.
At Bankside flue-gases from the boilers were washed with a three-pass counter-current/co-current flow of river water from the Thames (to which chalk was added) in cedar wood scrubber towers.
This process produced a characteristic white plume from the chimney. The plant was effective at removing
sulphur compounds from the flue-gases (over its operational life it achieved an overall average sulphur removal efficiency of 97.2%).
However, the process cooled the gases which caused ‘plume-droop’ under certain atmospheric conditions, causing a fume nuisance at ground level. Contaminated water from the flue-gas washing plant was treated in tanks through which air was bubbled; this oxidised the sulphite to sulphate, the water was diluted with water from the condensers before being returned to the river.
This pollution was insignificant in the 1950s but was detrimental to the recovery of the Thames after concerted efforts were made to clean up the river from the late 1960s.
District heating
In 1971 the
London Electricity Board gained legal powers to develop a
district heating scheme at Bankside.
A boiler house was constructed on the north face of the building at the base of the chimney together with underground pipes in Tooley Street. The scheme was abandoned following the fuel crisis of 1973-4.
Generating capacity and output
The total output of Bankside B for selected years over its operational life was as follows.
On 8 October 1970 the station produced 6,004,364 kWh in a 24-hour period.
Rising oil prices from 1973 made the station uneconomic compared to coal-fired power stations, resulting in it being used less often – principally during the winter and at peak times. One of the 60 MW units was decommissioned in 1976 and the two other 60 MW units in 1978. The 120 MW unit was derated to 100 MW. Bankside B was closed on 31 October 1981.
Redevelopment
Following its closure there were several proposals to redevelop the redundant power station or its site. These included an industrial museum, an entertainment hall, a hotel, an opera house, and a conference and exhibition centre, but none were financially viable.
[H. Pearman, ‘Opera Plan for Power Station’, ''Sunday Times'', 12 February 1989, p.9.] There were also campaigns for the building to be saved. The group
Save Britain's Heritage visited Bankside in May 1980 and produced a report on possible uses. Applications to
list the building in 1987 and 1992 were refused. The government wished to sell the site and listing would have constrained how developers could intervene in the fabric of the building.
Bankside was given a 'Certificate of immunity from listing' on 3 February 1993.
At the
privatisation
Privatization (also privatisation in British English) can mean several different things, most commonly referring to moving something from the public sector into the private sector. It is also sometimes used as a synonym for deregulation when ...
of the British electricity industry in 1990 the power station was transferred to
Nuclear Electric. The company prepared the building for sale by removing asbestos and the redundant machinery at a cost of £2.5 million. An application was made to demolish the west wall of the building to enable this to be done, but contractors were able to remove the plant through a hole in the west wall. The BBC television programme ''
One Foot in the Past'' focused on the impending threat to the building; the reporter,
Gavin Stamp, made an impassioned plea for the building to be saved.
In April 1994 the
Tate Gallery announced that Bankside would be the home for the new
Tate Modern. The £134 million conversion started in June 1995 with the removal of the remaining redundant plant. The conversion work was carried out by
Carillion
Carillion plc was a British multinational construction and facilities management services company headquartered in Wolverhampton in the United Kingdom, prior to its liquidation in January 2018.
Carillion was created in July 1999, following a ...
and completed in January 2000. Some of the internal structure remains, including the turbine hall. An
electrical substation
A substation is a part of an electrical generation, transmission, and distribution system. Substations transform voltage from high to low, or the reverse, or perform any of several other important functions. Between the generating station and ...
, taking up the southern part of the building, remained on-site and was owned by the
French
French (french: français(e), link=no) may refer to:
* Something of, from, or related to France
** French language, which originated in France, and its various dialects and accents
** French people, a nation and ethnic group identified with Franc ...
power company
EDF Energy. In 2006, EDF announced that they would be releasing half this holding to the museum. The oil tanks were redeveloped into a performance art space opened in July 2012. A tower extension to the museum over the tanks was opened on 17 June 2016.
Film and television
Several episodes of British television, particularly
science fiction series that have required industrial backdrops, such as ''
Red Dwarf
''Red Dwarf'' is a British science fiction comedy franchise created by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, which primarily consists of a television sitcom that aired on BBC Two between 1988 and 1999, and on Dave since 2009, gaining a cult following. T ...
'', were filmed at the station. The building featured in
Danny Cannon's film
''Judge Dredd''.
It served as the
Tower of London in
Richard Loncraine's 1995 film version of ''
Richard III
Richard III (2 October 145222 August 1485) was King of England and Lord of Ireland from 26 June 1483 until his death in 1485. He was the last king of the House of York and the last of the Plantagenet dynasty. His defeat and death at the Battl ...
''. In its modern incarnation as the Tate Modern, the building's exterior is featured at the beginning of the premiere episode of ''
Ashes to Ashes''. It also appeared in ''
Children of Men
''Children of Men'' is a 2006 dystopian action thriller film co-written and directed by Alfonso Cuarón. The screenplay, based on P. D. James' 1992 novel '' The Children of Men'', was credited to five writers, with Clive Owen making uncredi ...
'' by
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón Orozco ( , ; born 28 November 1961) is a Mexican filmmaker. He is known for directing films in a variety of genres including the family drama ''A Little Princess (1995 film), A Little Princess'' (1995), the romantic drama ''Gre ...
. In 2018, Tate Modern was featured prominently in the
Tom Cruise blockbuster, ''
Mission: Impossible – Fallout''.
See also
*
Battersea Power Station
*
City of London Electric Lighting Company
The City of London Electric Lighting Company Limited (CLELCo) was a British electricity undertaking. It was formed in July 1891 to generate and supply electricity to the City of London and part of north Southwark. It owned and operated Bankside p ...
*
Energy use and conservation in the United Kingdom
*
Energy policy of the United Kingdom
The energy policy of the United Kingdom refers to the United Kingdom's efforts towards reducing energy intensity, reducing energy poverty, and maintaining energy supply reliability. The United Kingdom has had success in this, though energy int ...
References
External links
Photos of the interior of Bankside Power Station 1991*Article
Electrifying the City: Power and Profit at the City of London Electric Lighting Company LimitedArticle: The battle for Bankside: electricity, politics and the plans for post-war London
{{Authority control
Energy infrastructure completed in 1963
Oil-fired power stations in England
Buildings and structures in the London Borough of Southwark
Redevelopment projects in London
Power stations on the River Thames
Former power stations in London
Port of London
Adaptive reuse of industrial structures in the United Kingdom