Monday, March 30, 2015

Where in Melbourne puzzle - April 2015

Welcome, this is the Osca Monthly Where in Melbourne Puzzle page.
  

 THIS PUZZLE HAS BEEN REVEALED

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY
. . .

 Clue 1
Clue 1
The building of this structure in 1897 at a cost of £3.5 million provided a much needed boost to local industry and employment at a time when Victoria was gripped by a major economic recession.

. . .

Clue 2
Clue 2
This building formed a part of vital infrastructure
without which Melbourne could not have grown into a metropolis.
. . .

Clue 3
 Clue 3
One of the locations for the filming of Mad Max.
. . .

Clue 4
Clue 4
For all the grandeur that was ‘Marvellous Melbourne’ in the 1880s, the city was nicknamed ‘Smellbourne’.

An appalling stench wafted from the many cesspits and open drains.

‘Nightsoil’ (as human waste was politely referred to) polluted the streets and ran into the Yarra.

Hundreds died in a savage outbreak of typhoid.

Something had to be done!


. . .

 THE SOLUTION

The picture is of the old MMBW pumping station buildings at Spotswood,
adjacent to Scienceworks.

. . .

Spotswood was named after J.S. Spottiswoode,
one of the first farmers who owned much of the area in the 1840s.

  
 Spotswood Pumping station soon after completion.

The Spotswood Pumping Station was built in the 1890s as a key component of the Melbourne Sewerage Scheme. Functioning as the heart of the system, the pumping station played a vital role in helping to overcome the city's early public health and sanitation problems. 

For almost 70 years from 1898, all the sewage collected in Melbourne's underground sewers passed through the pumps at Spotswood, on its way to the treatment works at Werribee.


Construction of the pumping station began in March 1894, with the local Footscray firm Messrs Garnsworthy & Smith being awarded the contract to prepare the site and foundations. 
 
Their first task was to excavate a massive hole measuring 20 metres by 100 metres and almost 25 metres in depth - much of it was blasted out of solid basalt.



With the aid of steam cranes and a small steam locomotive, almost 25,500 cubic meters of broken rock and spoil were removed weighing around 70,000 tonnes.

Work progressed around the clock in continuous shifts with arc lamps providing illumination at night.

Brick and concrete lined tunnels for the inlet sewers, access tunnels, steel pipes and twelve large elliptical pump wells formed the heart of the pumping station.


Built by Thompson's Foundry, the steel pipes had to be huge.

Thompson's Foundry still exists today as Thompsons Kelly & Lewis Engineering Works.




 The building of  Spotswood Pumping Station was completed in 1897.
 
Steam engines (later replaced by electrical ones) worked to pump the sewage up a rising main to join the major sewer outfall at the head of the pumping mains near Millers Road at Brooklyn.


Former Shift Engineer Geoffrey Archer revisits his former workplace
and shares some stories of his working life at the Pumping Station.


The outfall sewer then carried the sewage to the Werribee Treatment Farm where it was purified and discharged into the sea.

Managed today by Western Treatment Plant, the original Werribee Treatment Farm has grown to encompass some 10,500 hectares and treats more than half of Melbourne's sewage.

 Satellite view of Western Treatment Plant.

The wetlands offer excellent bird-watching opportunities and are accessible to public.

An integrated ecosystem, the Western Treatment Plant generates renewable energy and produces approximately 40 billion litres of recycled water a year whilst being supporting a wetland haven for more than 280 species of birds.


. . .

Satellite Location of Spotswood Pumping Station


 Research links:

Culture Victoria

Melbourne Water

Public Records Office of Victoria

 Museum Victoria

Time recalled

Atlas Obscura

Victorian Heritage Database


Thompsons Kelly & Lewis Engineering Works

You Tube

Wikipedia - Spotswood

____________________________________________________________________

NEW MAY WHERE IN MELBOURNE PUZZLE
will be posted May 4th 2015


____________________________________________________________________

This post was last updated on the 27th of April 2015.
The next update will be posted on Monday the 4th of May.


Monday, March 2, 2015

Where in Melbourne - March 2015

Welcome, this is the Osca Monthly Where in Melbourne Puzzle page.
  

DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY

CLUE 1
CLUE 1
The artist's inspiration was a seed.

CLUE 2
CLUE 2
You might see it on the way to the airport or the ZOO.

CLUE 3
 CLUE 3
This project came to fruition in 2013

CLUE 4
 
CLUE 4
The installation is inspired by the relationship between urban living and the natural environment.
. . .

SOLUTION

This month's picture is of 'Fruition' on the corner of Elliot Ave and Flemington Road, Parkville.

"FRUITION"
a sculpture by Matthew Harding.



Matthew Harding has created this public art project for The City of Melbourne in 2013.

The sculpture is made of Corten Steel. , is a group of steel alloys which are used to eliminate the need for painting, and form a stable rust-like appearance if exposed to the weather for several years.

 ‘Fruition’ is a a series of weather-resistant steel pods, handcrafted by Harding and installed in Royal Park last week. The pods are made of corten steel. COR-TEN steel, sometimes written without the hyphen as "Corten steel" is a steel alloy metal which encourages a protective rust-layer forming on its surface allowing the pods to change with the weather and age ‘naturally’ in the park.

The installation is inspired by the relationship between urban living and the natural environment.

‘Fruition’ brings to primal form the circle of life from growth to decay; strength to fragility.
As an inanimate symbol of biology, Fruition aims to encourage thought on the connection between the city and the natural environment.




You can watch a time lapse video of the installation of ‘Fruition’ here courtesy of The City of Melbourne







LINKS

marsgallery