Neha Patil (Editor)

Wakefield power station

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Country
  
Nameplate capacity
  
224 MW

Location
  
Agbrigg, Wakefield

Status
  
Decommissioned

Primary fuel
  
Wakefield power station WakefieldPowerStation late seventies stu smith Flickr

Commission date
  
A station: 1898B station: 1948

Decommission date
  
A station: ?B station: 1991

Construction began
  
A station: ?; B station: Early-1940s

The Wakefield power stations refers to a series of two coal-fired power stations situated on the River Calder at Agbrigg south east of Wakefield, serving much of West Yorkshire. The first station on the site, Wakefield A power station was constructed in the late-1880s. A second station, Wakefield B power station, was brought into operation in the late-1940s and was decommissioned in 1991.

Contents

Wakefield power station Image Detail Twixt Aire and Calder

The power station was situated between the A638 Doncaster Road and the southern bank of the Aire & Calder Navigation, just east of the point where the railway line (originally built by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway in 1848), from Wakefield Kirkgate to Oakenshaw junction, crosses the navigation.

Wakefield power station Wakefield Power Station Presumably these were CEGB tied ho Flickr

Wakefield A

Wakefield power station Demolition of Wakefield B 1991 Three years after closing Flickr

The power station was opened on 15 July 1898 and was used until its replacement with the second power station on this site. It had a turbo generator that was capable of 20,000 hp (15 MW).

Wakefield B

Wakefield power station Enabling works deal for 750m Wakefield power station Construction

Wakefield B was constructed between 1945 and 1947. It opened on 1 April 1948 and generated 224 MW of electricity. The site covered 55 acres where there were four turbo generators, with a speed of 3,000 RPM. The boilers consumed 28 tons of coal per hour, whilst the condensers used 40,000 gallons of water per minute. The tallest chimney stood 350 feet above the ground. Between 1955 and 1986, the station consumed 18 million tons of coal and produced 35,000,000,000 kW hours of electricity.

A science fiction film was shot in the power station in 1991.

Wakefield B was finally demolished at 9 am on 1 December 1991.

Wakefield power station Former Wakefield Power Station reminders Mike Kirby Geograph

Wakefield power station Wakefield B Power Station This bw print took pride of pla Flickr

Wakefield power station Wakefield Councils Museum Collections Online

Wakefield power station BBC Domesday Reloaded Wakefield Power Station

References

Wakefield power station Wikipedia


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