Highlights from the Life of a Gasometer

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  • čas přidán 22. 01. 2008
  • Timelapse video of a gasometer outside my window. 2005. Camera and editing: Steve Pemberton. Music: "Blade" by AKM Music.
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Komentáře • 75

  • @SuperMok68
    @SuperMok68 Před 2 lety +22

    That is me and my mate working on that gasholder. They were a fantastic piece of engineering. It looks as if we were checking all alarms and making sure that it was safe to put to work. The cycle of a gasholder is that at night it fills when demand is low and will start to empty around five thirty in the morning to assist with demand. There were many safety devices that would be monitored by grid control and were a source of many callouts to high alarms low alarms and many others. This holder was relatively small only being two lifts, the larger ones were between three and four lifts. This holder was an above ground holder spiral guided. Some are column guided. The lifts as they rise pick up water from the tank to provide a seal the seal of water being above the pressure that the holder throws at it high point. Weight of each lift produces the pressure. Each lift had heaters to prevent ice forming in the seals in extreme cold weather. Conversely in warmer weather with no demand Sun gas was a problem as the heat would cause the holder to rise sometimes to it's high alarm setting. There was much more to them than just an old sometimes rusty hulk but it was a great job looking after them. Sadly they are now virtually all gone.

  • @DanielDaaar
    @DanielDaaar Před 6 lety +126

    Tom Scott anyone?

  • @sloblock1972
    @sloblock1972 Před 10 lety +75

    You really can find just about anything on CZcams! My 3 year old son has developed an obsession with the derelict one of these just down the road from where we live and I wanted to show him one in operation. Now he knows what they do! Thanks for sharing :)

    • @Nitrxgen
      @Nitrxgen Před 5 lety +3

      as an urban explorer, I climb them while they still exist

    • @rybolfc
      @rybolfc Před 5 lety +3

      As a kid growing up I was always fascinated by gasometers due to always walking/getting driven past them for a section of my life! We still do have two working gasometers in Bootle, Merseyside.

    • @fruitella196
      @fruitella196 Před 4 lety +1

      nitrxgen done the Southampton ones yet?

    • @lolnamelollastname9788
      @lolnamelollastname9788 Před 2 lety +1

      BBC Sounds has an episode about gasometers in The Boring Talks!

    • @ashthegreat1
      @ashthegreat1 Před 2 lety +1

      Newstead (Brisbane) resident here for the exact same reason.

  • @DavidJones-nf3de
    @DavidJones-nf3de Před 2 lety +9

    Superb video, looks just like the one outside the window of an office I worked at, never could actually perceive it moving, just noticed that at some points of the day a lot of the buildings behind were suddenly visible. This was in 2010 so they can't have all been defunct that long.

  • @selinagonza1186
    @selinagonza1186 Před 8 lety +25

    this is so cool and scary at the same time. i have a gas holder directly behing my garden and I've always wondered how they worked. thanks

  • @originaluddite
    @originaluddite Před 6 lety +28

    Only found out that these things move today while reading about them. I'm from Australia and we have few if any, but I was in the UK recently and saw plenty (mostly disused) which got me curious. Amazing to have a part of the urban landscape that is so dynamic.

    • @robwebster4895
      @robwebster4895 Před 2 lety +1

      There's one in Brisbane. I'm guessing it's been decommissioned, but it still stands, at least partially, and is at the heart of the Gasworks Pcct at Newstead

    • @originaluddite
      @originaluddite Před 2 lety

      Cool.

    • @robertleeimages
      @robertleeimages Před rokem

      1 near me in Bendigo Central Victoria, its being preserved and recently had a huge tidy up of the grounds and have started giving tours. It only ceased operation in 1973, and was used as a dumping ground for bulky things by council and even old trams of which some are still there waiting for restoration

    • @originaluddite
      @originaluddite Před rokem +1

      @@robertleeimages how cool. May have to check it out next time I go there.

  • @BigKelvPark
    @BigKelvPark Před 8 lety +7

    Great vid. I had to explain to a young apprentice what the accumulator was. Currently being cut down in Norwich. A triumph on Victorian engineering.

  • @emotivepiano
    @emotivepiano Před 2 lety +2

    This brings back some memories, thanks for the upload (I think!). This type of gas holder, without a surrounding frame, is like the dark and brown, forbidding behemoths towering over the towns I've lived in. I guess they were cheaper to construct than the ones surronded by girders but I always thought couldn't they have painted the outside or even rented it out as advertising space to brighten it up?

  • @justinbyers7443
    @justinbyers7443 Před 10 lety +11

    Thanks for sharing this, I've always wanted to see these in operation. We don't have these in America

    • @th8257
      @th8257 Před 4 lety +2

      Yup, you do. There are several in Philadelphia alone.

    • @ARSZLB
      @ARSZLB Před 2 lety

      yeah there’s plenty here, wtf are you talking about

  • @metalmicky
    @metalmicky Před 2 lety +2

    You always tell when you were in for a cold spell because the containers would be filled up (up high ) to cope with predicted demand.

  • @maestro66uk
    @maestro66uk Před 9 lety +4

    Brilliant video

  • @QKicks
    @QKicks Před 3 lety +8

    for a while I thought it showed the construction of one. I was wondering why they build it so oddly from the bottom up lifting the entire thing. then it started sinking down. what the heck man. they just move like that

  • @kenkahre9262
    @kenkahre9262 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you. I've al;ways wondered exactly how these worked. Just never could visualize it.

  • @MrStr8den
    @MrStr8den Před 3 lety +1

    I could spend a summer's day with a flask and sandwich watching one of these

  • @StevenJPemberton
    @StevenJPemberton  Před 15 lety +10

    Can you see them move in real time? Maybe if you're very patient :-) I've never seen it happen.

  • @charliecharliecharliecharl8554

    I remember walking up one f two near me and seeing water all round the joints and told the water was used as a seal

  • @BenevoIence
    @BenevoIence Před 7 lety +1

    That's pretty cool

  • @batsondceiling
    @batsondceiling Před 10 lety +4

    Nice place for a rooftop restaurant.

  • @Hypohair
    @Hypohair Před 5 lety +1

    Is great, you don't notice this at their normal movement rates. Fascinating and a little scary lol

  • @ylette
    @ylette Před 4 lety +5

    Never knew they rotated.

    • @whitemonkey7932
      @whitemonkey7932 Před 2 měsíci

      Have runners....it stops them kicking over as they move

  • @strdown
    @strdown Před 11 lety +6

    Where abouts is this? Borehamwood?

  • @StevenJPemberton
    @StevenJPemberton  Před 10 lety +2

    Not quite as glamorous a location as the restaurant in "Fast Food", but I can see the attraction :-)

  • @UKWMO
    @UKWMO Před 2 lety

    I remember the argument I had with a work colleague who wouldn’t believe the Gasometer opposite our office would change in height depending on the gas levels. He was dumbfounded when he realised I was right.

  • @DonHavjuan
    @DonHavjuan Před 4 lety +3

    We haven't had these since the 1960s but you still see the frames around.

    • @th8257
      @th8257 Před 4 lety +2

      They were still in service in many parts of the UK well past the 1960s, indeed, into the early 2000s at least in some places. In the 1990s, the IRA tried to bomb some of them in the North east.

    • @imkirbo3094
      @imkirbo3094 Před 3 lety +2

      We had these still in operation in the early 2000s in the UK.

  • @jagc1969
    @jagc1969 Před 2 lety

    There are steel works nearby and they have two gasometers, one per blast furnace. But these gasometers never move. They have an internal diaphragm that does the job, but you never see any movement.

  • @turbodistortionirmc
    @turbodistortionirmc Před 7 lety

    Nice

  • @aleonard4426
    @aleonard4426 Před 3 měsíci

    Hey, Steve , cool video! What kind of sounds did the gasometer make? Was it loud? Do you have any audio of the thing itself?

    • @StevenJPemberton
      @StevenJPemberton  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Thanks. I'm afraid I don't have any audio to go with this. I don't recall ever hearing the gasometers make a sound, though there's a railway station on the other side of picture, so if they did make a sound, I'd probably have assumed it was a train. They move much more slowly than shown in this video, and I think the moving parts sit in a bath of oil, which would tend to absorb sound. My guess is either they don't make a sound, or any sound they do make is too low for humans to hear.

  • @StevenJPemberton
    @StevenJPemberton  Před 11 lety +3

    Yep - Station Road.

  • @laraj777
    @laraj777 Před 2 lety

    I remember a movie with Ralph Fiennes about lonely man with mental illness where home that person localized just near that awful gas holder making awful sound.

  • @instakillgaming
    @instakillgaming Před rokem

    Tom scott brought me here

  • @martytrain
    @martytrain Před 9 lety +4

    Are there any gas holders that rise like this anywhere left in the UK? They all appear to be down these days waiting demolition!

    • @StevenJPemberton
      @StevenJPemberton  Před 9 lety

      Martin H The one in the video is still there, though I don't know if it still goes up and down. It's due to be demolished later this year, probably to make way for flats.

    • @martytrain
      @martytrain Před 9 lety

      Thanks Steve, allot of these Holders are out of use now, everyone I,ve visited in Berkshire are down, just hoped perhaps some might still be used but its looking like time is up.

    • @StevenJPemberton
      @StevenJPemberton  Před 9 lety +4

      +Martin H We had a letter about the demolition yesterday that said this gas holder hasn't held gas since the 1990s, so I don't know why it was moving in 2005...

    • @turbodistortionirmc
      @turbodistortionirmc Před 7 lety

      Mystery

    • @borehamwoodcc
      @borehamwoodcc Před 4 lety +2

      @J Brown That sounds plausible. And yes, the gas holder was demolished a couple of years ago. The flats that replaced it are just about finished and have gone on sale.

  • @tsitracommunications2884

    Did some gasometers have red lights on the sides at night?

  • @kurade1096
    @kurade1096 Před 3 lety

    10 people: i hate this

  • @Omlet221
    @Omlet221 Před 3 lety

    Why does it spin?

    • @StevenJPemberton
      @StevenJPemberton  Před 3 lety +1

      I don't know. Maybe it allows for a tighter seal than if the top goes straight up and down?

    • @anelpasic5232
      @anelpasic5232 Před 2 lety +1

      It's so that it doesn't kink and get stuck.

  • @thedave7760
    @thedave7760 Před 10 měsíci

    if you still have the original jpgs you will be able to make a much better video now days as opposed to 15 years ago, send them to me and i will do it for you and send it back.