The Thames Tideway Tunnel : preventing another Great Stink / Phil Stride.
Publisher: Stroud, Gloucestershire : The History Press, 2019Description: 223 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (black and white, and colour).Content type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780750989817.Subject(s): Sewerage -- England -- London -- History


Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 628.209421 STR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 016547 |
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628 BAT Sewerage and sewage as an environmental health issue / | 628.1 STY The power of water : a primer for anyone entering the water industry / | 628.16833 IMP The impact of an oil spill in turbulent waters : | 628.209421 STR The Thames Tideway Tunnel : | 629.040286 KOP Turning the right corner : | 629.22209 PAR The life of the automobile : a new history of the motor car / | 629.2222 DIE The Dieselgate : |
Background -- The Great Stink: London before and after Bazalgette -- The new waste water crisis -- Rising to the challenge -- The biggest challenge: arguing our case -- Bazalgette reborn: a remarkable engineering solution -- Plan to reality, and the future.
"In 1858 the ‘Great Stink of London’ made much of the city along the River Thames uninhabitable. Between 1848 and 1854 nearly 25,000 Londoners died of cholera, a disease borne by foul water. Joseph Bazalgette saved the city, building sewers that would serve 4 million people and stop waste water emptying into the Thames. These remarkable sewers are still the backbone of London’s sewerage system today, but the city’s population is now approaching 10 million. The old sewers can’t cope with the needs of modern-day London and action needs to be taken to ensure that ‘The Great Stink’ never happens again. This is where the Thames Tideway Tunnel comes in: a £4.2 billion, 25km-long, 7.2m-diameter tunnel that will stop virtually all of the sewer overflows into the Thames and give us a cleaner and healthier river and city. The Thames Tideway Tunnel: Preventing Another Great Stink is the inside story on the tunnel, from the very start to breaking ground and all the steps along the way. Written by Phil Stride, a leading civil engineer, it is a unique chance both to see behind the scenes of an incredible civil engineering project that will transform the environment, and to meet the people who’ve taken the project forward over the last ten years." -- Taken from front flap.