Leicester power station explained

Leicester power stations
Country:United Kingdom
Location:Leicester
Status:Decommissioned and demolished
Construction Began:1893
Commissioned:1894, 1904, 1922, 1976
Decommissioned:1928, 1930, 1976, 1990
Owner:Leicester Corporation
(1894-1948)
British Electricity Authority
(1948–1955)
Central Electricity Authority
(1955–1957)
Central Electricity Generating Board
(1958–1989)
Operator:As owner
Th Fuel Primary:Coal
Th Fuel Secondary:Fuel oil (gas turbines)
Th Technology:Steam turbines
Ps Chimneys:3 (Freemans Meadow), 2 (gas turbine)
Ps Cooling Towers:6
Ps Cooling Source:River or canal water plus cooling towers
Ps Units Manu Model:see text
Ps Electrical Capacity:131 MW (steam), 102 MW (gas turbine)
Ps Annual Generation:561 GWh (1955)

Leicester power stations are a series of electricity generating stations that have provided electric power to the City of Leicester and the wider area from 1894. The first station, located within Aylestone gas works, supplied electricity for street lighting. The city's new electric tram system was supplied from 1904 by a station at Lero which operated until 1930. A large coal-fired power station was constructed at Freemans Meadow in 1922 and was operational until 1976. Finally a gas turbine power plant was commissioned in 1976.

Background

Leicester was one of first nine municipalities to obtain legal powers to provide street lighting in the city. The authority to do this was provided for under the Leicester (Further Powers to Corporation) Act 1879 (42 & 43 Vict. c. cc).[1] However, little progress was made with the new technology. The Corporation of Leicester obtained, from the Board of Trade, a Provisional Electric Lighting Order in 1890 permitting it to generate electricity and supply electric lighting for the city. This Provisional Order was confirmed by Parliament by the Electric Lighting Order Confirmation (No. 7) Act 1890 (53 & 54 Vict. c. cxcii).[2]

Aylestone Road power station

The first power station in Leicester was built in 1894 within the gas works site on Aylestone Road (52°37'00.1"N 1°08'32.0"W).[3] It first provided electricity on 19 December 1894. In 1897 the plant had a generating capacity of 675 kW and the maximum load was 515 kW. A total of 262.179 MWh of electricity was sold to 331 customers which powered 26,512 lamps, this provided an income to the corporation of £6,056-12-9.[4]

By 1923 the station comprised three 1 MW reciprocating engines and a 5 MW turbo-alternator.[5] These machines were powered by total of up to 181,000 pounds per hour (22.8 kg/s) of steam from coal-fired boilers. The machines generated alternating current (AC) supplied at 240 & 415 V and 100 & 200 V. The electricity works were decommissioned in 1928 after the new power station at Freemans Meadow had been built.

Midland Railway Station

In 1894 the Midland Railway Company installed a gas-fired power station in Leicester.[6] This used two Dowson gas producers working on anthracite, the gas produced operated six single cylinder Crossley engines with porcelain tube ignition. Three machines drove 60-lamp Brush arc lighting generators and the other three drove 110 Volt direct current dynamos for incandescent lights. The total output of the station was 274 MWh per year. The Midland railway station and the goods yards were lit by 141 arc lights and 288 incandescent lamps. The system was reported to have run for many years.

Lero power station

Leicester's tram system was first built in 1874 using horse drawn cars.[7] The Corporation of Leicester took over the system in 1901 and converted it to electric power in 1904. To meet this demand a new generating station was constructed on Painter Street[8] (52°38'42.0"N 1°07'47.2"W) the station buildings, comprising a boiler house and an engine room, were known as the Lero building. It was located next to the Grand Union Canal to facilitate the supply of coal by barge and for the availability of cooling water. The power station was officially opened on 18 May 1904. The boiler house was 108 ft long and 77 ft wide (32.9 m by 23.5 m). In 1904 there were four Yates and Thom Lancashire type boilers, these were 33 ft long and 8 ft 5 inches diameter (10 m by 2.5 m). The tapered octagonal brick chimney was 186 ft high (56.7 m).

The engine room adjoining the boiler house was 118 ft long, 60 ft wide and 40 ft high (36 m by 18.2 m, by 12.2 m). There were three 500 kW steam generating sets. The engines were Yates and Thom vertical cross-compound Corliss condensing type.[9] The principal specifications of the engines were:

There was a separate battery room which supplied additional current when the demand on the system was high.

In 1906 additional plant was added raising the capacity to 3 × 500 kW and 1 × 1,000 kW generators. There was sufficient generating capacity to allow up to 20 percent of the electricity produced to be sold to industry throughout Leicester. Electricity was delivered to consumer's premises by overhead wires and the return current through the tram track completed the circuit. In 1910 the engine room was extended by 54 ft (11 m) and a Willans & Robinson turbine and a Siemens 1,000 kW DC generator were commissioned. To meet the demand for alternating current (AC), a 750 kW alternator driven by a direct current (DC) motor was also installed.

The Lero and the Aylestone generating sites were electrically coupled in 1914, and were managed by the Tramways and Electricity Committee of the Corporation. As Leicester expanded so did the demand for electricity.

By 1923 the plant at the Lero station had been increased to 2 × 3 MW turbo-alternators generating AC; 3 × 0.5 MW and 1 × 1 MW reciprocating engines plus 1 × 0.75 MW steam turbine all generating direct current (DC). The machines at Lero were supplied with up to 164,000 pounds per hour (20.7 kg/s) of steam from the coal-fired boilers.

The Lero station was closed on 30 June 1930, when electricity generation was centralised at Freemans Meadow power station. The buildings were used from 1946 as an extension for the Leicester College of Technology; they were eventually demolished in 2010.

Freemans Meadow power station

Following the First World War, and in anticipation of a post-war increase in demand for electricity, the Corporation of Leicester built a central power station at Freemans Meadow (52°37'10.6"N 1°08'35.7"W). This is now the site of Leicester City Football Club's King Power Stadium. The station opened in December 1922 and was also known as Raw Dykes Road power station. The tram system was fed from a 3-phase electricity supply via rotary converters. These converters were located at Sanvey Gate and Newarke St. The new station initially had a 10 MW turbo-alternator and a 500 kW house service set supplied with up to 196,000 pounds per hour (24.7 kg/s) of steam from eight 45,000 lb/h coal-fired boilers.

Three power stations, 1923

The three operational power stations – Aylestone, Lero and Freemans Meadow – supplying electricity to Leicester simultaneously in 1923 had a total generating capacity of 27.25 MW. The total output of the stations in 1921-23 was:

Leicester power stations electricity output!Year!Output, GWh
192125.219
192224.214
192330.714
At this time the maximum load on the system was 19.08 MW, and there was a connected load of 29,148 kW. The electric current sold was put to the following uses:
Electricity use, 1923!Use!Current sold, MWh!Current, %
Lighting and domestic4,59815.0
Public lighting470.1
Traction7,95625.9
Power18,11359.0
Bulk supply0.00.0
Total30,714100.0
The total revenue to the Corporation from sales of electricity in 1923 was £292,437, making a surplus of revenue over expenditure of £121,113.

Freemans Meadow LP station

New plant was installed at Freemans Meadow over the period 1928–39, this was known as the low pressure (LP) station. It comprised the following:[10]

Boilers:

Turbo-alternators:

All machines ran at 3,000 rpm, generating 3-phase current at 50 Hz.

In the 1920s the British equipment manufacturers operated 'price maintenance rings' to keep prices high. Leicester Corporation obtained the Oerlikon machine from the Swiss manufacturers at a considerable saving. This was in the face of opposition from trade unions and business interests to buy British equipment.[11]

Cooling water for the condensers was abstracted from the River Soar. Supplementary cooling was by six Mitchell cooling towers with an aggregate capacity of 4.2 million gallons per hour (5.3 m3/s).

Following the construction of the national grid in 1928–33, a 132 kV substation was built to the north of Freemans Meadow power station (52°37'21.0"N 1°08'27.7"W).[12]

During the Second World War the cooling towers were painted with camouflage.[13]

The key operating parameters of the LP station in 1954–58 were:

Freemans Meadow LP station!Year!Output capacity, MW!Running hours (load factor %)!Units sent out, GWh!Thermal efficiency, %
1946(42.9 %)300.2619.73
1954754935173.44118.23
1955754830177.24818.68
1956754743157.94418.53
1957714924155.89818.88
195871353887.29417.68

Nationalisation

Upon nationalisation of the British electricity supply industry in 1948[14] the ownership of Leicester power station was vested in the British Electricity Authority, and subsequently the Central Electricity Authority and the Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB). The electricity distribution and sales functions were vested in the East Midlands Electricity Board.

Freemans Meadow HP station

Following the Second World War high pressure (HP) plant was installed in Freemans Meadow in 1949–50 by the British Electricity Authority. This comprised:

Boilers:

Turbo-alternators:

Cooling water for the condensers was abstracted from the River Soar. Supplementary cooling was by two Concrete Piling cooling towers each with a capacity of 1.35 million gallons per hour (1.71 m3/s).

The key operating parameters of the HP station in 1954–8 were:

Freemans Meadow HP station!Year!Output capacity, MW!Running hours!Units sent out, GWh!Thermal efficiency, %
1954608218377.96324.74
1955608320384.09324.87
1956607724360.26924.65
1957607347331.37224.58
1958605752265.23324.48

The total electricity output (HP and LP) and operating parameters of Freemans Meadow power station from 1961–71 was as follows:[15] [16]

Freemans Meadow station!Year!Max output capacity, MW!Load factor, %!Units sent out, GWh!Thermal efficiency, %
196113130.5349.68221.23
196213130.8353.5221.87
196313134.13391.73421.71
196713134.5393.27721.16
19719023.4184.79622.22
In 1962-64 there were concerns about dust emissions from the station. This was investigated by the Air Pollution and Smoke Abatement division of the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.[17]

Two former workers at Freemans Meadow power station (George Brown and Leonard Richardson) have given oral history accounts of their time there.[18]

The coal-fired station at Freemans Meadow was closed on 25 October 1976.[19] It was subsequently demolished.[20]

Gas turbine station

In 1972 the CEGB planned to build 12 gas turbine power stations totalling 2,550 MW. These would be used to provide main power generation rather than for peak-shaving. The first station was commissioned at Freemans Meadow Leicester in December 1976, these used industrial type gas turbines rather aero derivative types. Leicester had two 51 MW GEC Gas Turbine EM 610 fuel oil fired industrial gas turbines. The station had two steel chimneys.[21] The operating parameters of the gas turbine station were as follows.[22] [23] [24]

Leicester gas turbine station!Year!Max output capacity, MW!Load factor, %!Units sent out, GWh!Thermal efficiency, %
19791022.824.65720.95
19811020.32.35310.5
19821020.65.15820.07
198510219.7175.69724.81
19861020.54.60619.34
The load factor data demonstrates that the power station was not used significantly. The high output in 1984/5 was associated with the 1984/5 Miners' Strike, and the shortage of coal for coal-fired power stations.

There was a proposal to develop a district heating scheme for Leicester in 1986, using waste heat from the gas-turbines at Freemans Meadow power station. However, the development was not taken forward.[25]

The power station was still operated by the CEGB in 1989,[26] but was subsequently decommissioned and demolished.

The 132 kV electricity sub-station north of the site is still operational (2020).

Notes and References

  1. Book: Clifford, Frederick. A history of Private Bill Legislation. Palala Press. 2016.
  2. Web site: 1890. Local Acts of Parliament. 10 June 2020. legislation.gov.uk.
  3. Web site: Leicester Trams - The Lero. 11 June 2020. leicestertrams.org.uk.
  4. Book: Garcke, Emile. Manual of Electrical Undertakings vol. 3. P. S. King & son. 1898. London.
  5. Book: Electricity Commissioners. Electricity Supply - 1920-1925. HMSO. 1925. London. 54–57, 296–301.
  6. Book: Parsons, R. H.. The early days of the power station industry. Babcock and Wilcox. 1940. 9781114216433. Cambridge. 155.
  7. Web site: Leicester Corporation Transport. 11 June 2020. petergould.co.uk.
  8. Web site: 1903. Construction of Leicester power station - 1903. 12 June 2020. Image Leicestershire.
  9. Web site: Grace's Guide to British Industrial History. October 2012. Leicester power station. 10 June 2020. Grace's Guide to British Industrial History.
  10. Book: Garrett. Frederick C. . Garcke's Manual of Electricity Supply vol. 56. Electrical Press. 1959. London. A-69–70, A-125.
  11. Book: Hannah, Leslie. Leslie Hannah . Electricity before Nationalisation. Macmillan. 1979. 0333220862. London. 135.
  12. Web site: 1946. Britain from above. 12 June 2020. Britain from above.
  13. Web site: Power Station Cooling Towers In Wartime Camouflage. 13 June 2020. Image Leicestershire.
  14. Book: Electricity Council. Electricity supply in the United Kingdom. Electricity Council. 1987. 085188105X. London. 60–61, 69, 73, 102, 119.
  15. Book: CEGB. CEGB Annual Report and Accounts 1961,1962, 1963. CEGB. London.
  16. Book: CEGB. CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1972. CEGB. 1972. London. 13.
  17. Web site: The National Archives. (Reference: HLG 55/309.). 1964. Raw Dykes Road Power Station, Leicester: dust emissions. 10 June 2020. Nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  18. Web site: East Midlands Oral History Archive. East Midlands Oral History Archive ref: 903, EM/031 and 1294, EM/054.. le.ac.uk. Ref: 903, EM/031 and 1294, EM/054..
  19. House of Commons Written Answers, Coal-Fired Power Stations, 16 January 1984 Volume 52
  20. Web site: Demolition Service Limited. Demolition Service Limited. 11 June 2020. demolish.co.uk. 27.
  21. Web site: Martin. Charles. 1982. Leicester Gas Turbine Power Station, Rawdykes Road, Leicester. 11 June 2020. RIBA.
  22. Book: CEGB. CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1978-79. CEGB. 1979. 0902543598. London. 7.
  23. Book: CEGB. CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1981-82. CEGB. 1982. 0902543695. London. 7.
  24. CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1981, 1985, 1986, CEGB
  25. Jarvis. Ian. 1986. Can a successful city-wide CHP scheme be launched in the UK?. Energy Policy. 14. 2. 160–63. 10.1016/0301-4215(86)90126-6.
  26. Book: Electricity Council. Handbook of Electricity Supply Statistics 1989. Electricity Council. 1989. 085188122X. London. 8.