Hackney Power Station | |
Coordinates: | 51.5587°N -0.0401°W |
Country: | England |
Location: | Hackney, London |
Status: | Decommissioned and demolished |
Owner: | As operator |
Operator: | Borough of Hackney (1901–1948) British Electricity Authority (1948–1955) Central Electricity Authority (1955–1957) Central Electricity Generating Board (1958–1976) |
Th Fuel Primary: | Coal |
Th Fuel Secondary: | Refuse |
Ps Units Operational: | A: 2 × 30 MW, B: 2 × 33 MW and 1 × 30 MW |
Ps Units Decommissioned: | All |
Ps Electrical Capacity: | 92 MW |
Ps Annual Generation: | (See graphs below) |
Commissioned: | A 1901, B 1954 |
Decommissioned: | A 1969, B 1976 |
Hackney Power Station (also known as Millfields Power Station or Millfields Electricity Generating Station)[1] was a coal-fired power station situated at Lea Bridge on the River Lee Navigation in London.
The 'A' station, opened in 1901, was built by the Borough of Hackney. Upon nationalisation of the electricity industry in 1948, the power station passed to the British Electricity Authority.[2] It originally burned local refuse as well as coal. The A station closed in 1969.
Following nationalisation a 'B' station was built, coming to use between 1954 and 1957.[3] The B station was itself closed on 25 October 1976 with a generating capacity of 92 MW.[4] It has been partially demolished, a sub-station remaining in part of the original buildings.
Coal was originally shipped up the Navigation from the Thames. However, in later years, as lighterage declined, up to thirty lorries per day transported coal to the station;[5] the station was isolated from the railway system by the Lea and Hackney Marshes.
In 1967 it was reported by a resident that coal dust from lorries delivering coal to Hackney power station 'lies like a black carpet in the front of our houses'. A Ministry of Transport spokesman said that delivering coal to the station by road instead of barges saves £33,450 a year.[6] Parts of the site and the land immediately adjacent to it now serve as the Hackney Council Millfields Waste Depot and electricity substations operated by UK Power Networks and National Grid, including 66kV, 132kV, 275kV and 400kV substations.[7] [8]
The power station and its chimney features in a 1977 silent short film by experimental filmmaker John Smith titled Hackney Marshes - November 4th 1977.[9]
New generating equipment was added as the demand for electricity increased. The generating capacity, maximum load, and electricity generated and sold was as follows:[10] [11]
Generating capacity, MW | Maximum load, MW | Electricity generated, GWh | Electricity sold, GWh | ||
1903/4 | 3.37 | 1.48 | 2.55 | 2.18 | |
1912/3 | 4.80 | 4.292 | 8.999 | 7.812 | |
1918/9 | 12.200 | 7.410 | 18.195 | 16.217 | |
1919/20 | 18.200 | 9.636 | 17.341 | 14.774 | |
1923/4 | 28.200 | 12.600 | 26.393 | 22.199 | |
1936/7 | 61.000 | 31.500 | 177.996 | 71.529 | |
1946 | 11.540 | 209.055 | 197.733 |
By 1963-64 the A station had 2 × 30 MW generators.[13] The steam capacity of the boilers was 1,014,000 lb/hr (127.8 kg/s). Steam conditions at the turbine stop valves was 200/370 psi (13.8/25.5 bar) and 282/416 °C. The boilers were chain grate stoked. In 1963-64 the overall thermal efficiency of the A station was 14.55 per cent.
By 1963-64 the B station had 2 × 33 MW Parsons and 1 × 30 MW Parsons generators.[14] There were 3 × 300,000 lb/hr (37.8 kg/s)[15] Simon-Carves boilers giving a total steam capacity of 930,000 lb/hr (117.2 kg/s). Steam conditions at the turbine stop valves was 600 psi (41.4 bar) and 464 °C. The boilers used pulverised fuel. In 1963-64 the overall thermal efficiency of the A station was 25.48 per cent. There was a single wood cooling tower with a capacity of 2.25 million gallons per hour (2.84 m3/s), make-up water was from the River Lea.
Electricity output from Hackney power station was as follows.[16] [17] [11]
Hackney A annual electricity output GWh.