Built 1916 Opened 1916 Added to NRHP 24 May 2007 | NRHP Reference # 07000467 Area 5 ha | |
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Similar 1724 Chester Courthouse, William Penn Landing, Delaware County National, Talen Energy Stadium, Commodore Barry Bridge |
Chester Waterside Station of the Philadelphia Electric Company is a historic former coal-fired power station, located on the Delaware River in Chester, Delaware County, southeastern Pennsylvania.
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Built by the Philadelphia Electric Company, it is currently owned by the PECO Energy Company of the Exelon Corporation. The complex has been out of service since 1984, awaiting adaptive reuse.
Architecture
The original section of the Station building was built in 1916, and consists of the Boiler House with attached Coal Towers and Turbine Hall, and the Switch House. The complex was designed by architect John T. Windrim and engineer William C.L. Eglin, and featured then recent advances in generating technology and industrial construction. The principal facades were designed in the Beaux-Arts style.
The Turbine Hall Annex addition was built in 1939-1942.
Also located on the property is the two-story, red brick Machine Shop building. It was also built by the Philadelphia Electric Company.
Landmark
The complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.
The Chester Waterside Station was documented by the federal HAER−Historic American Engineering Record, with extensive exterior and interior photography by renowned architectural photographer Jack Boucher in 1997 and 1998; architectural drawings; and a detailed descriptive report of the facility design and history, and its contemporary industrial history contexts.