Talk:Abbey Mills Pumping Station

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Incorrect Information[edit]

The article lead claims:

"It has a twin, Crossness Pumping Station, south of the River Thames at Crossness, at the end of the Southern Outfall Sewer."

I do not believe this to be correct in any detail. First: Crossness is not a twin as its architectural layout is completely different. Second, they are not even in equivalent positions in the sewage chain. Crossness, was at the end of the Southern Outfall and its purpose was to lift the sewage into a reservoir above the river level for release on the ebbing tide. Abbey Mills, by contrast was at the beginning of the Northern Outfall and its purpose was to raise sewerage from the interceptor sewers into the Northern Outfall.

Abbey Mills's southern counterpart was actually at Deptford, but the original no longer exists being replaced by an electric pumping station. Crossness's counterpart was actually in the Beckton area (just up river from Crossness), but this too no longer exists as the land was more valuable for building space and a more modern sewage treatment works now handles the outfall (as is now the case at Crossness). Crossness pumping station survived only because the dismantling costs far exceeded the scrap value of the engines, building materials and the land value put together (Crossness was in the middle of nowhere at the time of its decommisioning). 109.156.49.202 (talk) 12:31, 24 October 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Lead reworked to remove "twin". Bob1960evens (talk) 12:13, 17 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]