Walnut Hill Pumping Station Explained

Walnut Hill Pumping Station
Building Type:Industrial
Completion Date:1882

The Walnut Hill Pumping Station, located in the Walnut Hill neighborhood, is part of the Metropolitan Utilities District water system serving the City of Omaha, Nebraska. It occupies four square blocks between 38th and 40th Streets, from Hamilton to Nicholas Streets.

History

Three large reservoirs are filled daily by the Florence Water Works and distributed to the central part of the city by gravity. Three booster pumps the water to higher parts of the area, including Dundee. Walnut Hill is part of the original Omaha Water Works built in 1882. It was designed by Homer Virgil Knouse.[1] They were originally fed from an intake at Burt Street and the Missouri River.[2] The original landscaping at Walnut Hill, including sidewalks, streets, trees, and flowers cost $10,000.[3]

The Burt Street station continued to feed Walnut Hill, along with the newer Minne Lusa Pumping Station, until 1900. The original pump building burnt down in 1916 and was replaced by the current building.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. [American Society of Civil Engineers]
  2. Federal Writers' Project. (1939) Nebraska: A Guide to the Cornhusker State. Nebraska Historical Society. p 246.
  3. Gillette, H.P. (1916) Engineering and Contracting. Volume 60, Issues 1-6. p 46.
  4. http://www.historicomaha.com/omhaair2.htm "City's Walnut Hill Pumping Station Site Occupies Four Square Blocks"