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Greenway crossing road

Abbey Mills pumping stations and the Northern Outfall Sewer

Abbey Lane

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Monuments to sewage
Abbey Mills pumping stations and the Northern Outfall Sewer

The Northern Outfall Sewer carries North London's waste all the way to a sewage works on the Thames at Barking Creek. The embankment covering the sewer is now the Greenway: a footpath and cycle route passing the old and new Abbey Mills pumping stations and carrying on at roof top height through West Ham to Beckton.

Bazalgette's solution to the great stinkThe cathedral of sewage
The work of a great Victorian engineer, Bazalgette is still helping to keep London clean today. He built many miles of sewers together with pumping stations and treatment works.




 
Old pumpIt took the 'big stink' during the hot summer of 1858 to persuade members of parliament to permit Bazalgette to put his ambitious plans into action.





 
A network of sewers
Sewers from the high ground in the north of London join a system running from Chiswick in the west via the Victoria Embankment, to Old Ford in the east. These feed into the Northern Outfall Sewer. The sewage is lifted by pumps at Abbey Mills and then flow on to the treatment works at Beckton.
 
Abbey Mills sewage pumping stationsThe old Abbey Mills pumping station was built in the Byzantine style and originally contained eight Cornish beam engines. Now a modern pumping station stands alongside.

Submitted by: Andrew Hunt, 18 January 2007

Take a glimpse of London's early sewers when there was a nauseating stench even in the best homes. Find out more about cleaning up the drains and sewers and how the engineers investigated sewer design .

See also: Civil engineering Health and disease Structures

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