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The Great Britain Guide

Historic bridges · London

Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge

Free admission♿ Wheelchair: limited

Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge — a Grade I-listed bridge in england-london, United Kingdom.

London Museum of Water ^ Steam - geograph.org.uk - 4910322

Peter Trimming — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–30 min
  • Free entry
  • Family-friendly
  • Dog-friendly
  • Limited wheelchair access

About

Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge is a Grade I-listed building in england-london, United Kingdom. Grade I status is conferred by Historic England (or Cadw, Historic Environment Scotland or NIEA equivalents) on buildings of exceptional national interest. See the linked Wikipedia article for full historical and architectural details.

Photo gallery

Heritage listing

Details In the entry for:- KEW BRIDGE ROAD, BRENTFORD TQ 1878 16/194 Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge. I GV The description shall be amended to read: Stand-pipe tower. 1867. Builders Messrs Aird and Sons for the Grand Junction Water Works Company. Rendered brick with rendered dressings. Tower is square in plan, tapering in its height to the square base of the octagonal cupolas, to which the plan changes by means of squinches on the 4 corners. There are 2 large cornices, the lower forming the top of the plinth of the tower which is just under a third of its height. The upper-cornice is immediately below the squinches to the upper cupola, and has modillions. The plinth has a secondary plinth, cement rendered, banding approximately one third of its height and has 3 pilasters with rendered imposts and 2 semi-circular arches with ventilation slits in the recessed panels. This is on all 4 sides. The shaft has a rendered plinth of banding also 3 pilasters and 2 rendered arches with rendered imposts. Semi-cicular above there is a circular window with a large arch springing from the 2 outside pilasters. The cupola has slender openings in each face surmounted by a rendered arch on rendered imposts on all 8 sides. The shaft of the cupola is topped by a very simple banded capping. The cupola formerly had a copper dome. A ball and metal rod with lighting conductor forms the terminal finial to the tower. The tower contained a 4-foot rising and a 3-foot falling pipe, and replaced an earlier standpipe which was damaged by severe frost. ------------------------------------ KEW BRIDGE ROAD, BRENTFORD 1. 4419 Metropolitan Water Board Pump-house Tower Kew Bridge TQ 1878 16/194 I 2. Built 1867 as part of pump-house buildings, housing the important Boulton and Watt Corni

From the Historic England List Entry under OGL v3.

Place summary

The Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower is located at Kew Bridge in London, within the unparished area of Hounslow. This Grade I listed structure is notable for its historical significance in the development of London's water supply system.

AI-generated from the structured facts on this page (operator, designation, listing, era). Not a substitute for visiting.

Coordinates
51.4887, -0.2901
District
Hounslow
Parish
Hounslow, unparished area
Postcode
TW8 0EN
Parliamentary constituency
Hammersmith and Chiswick
Opening
Th-Su 10:00-16:00; Jul 22-Aug 28 We 10:00-16:00; SH 10:00-16:00

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge?
Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge is in London, United Kingdom (postcode TW8 0EN), in the parish of Hounslow, unparished area.
Is Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge a listed building?
Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge is officially recognised as Grade I listed.
Is Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge free to visit?
Yes, Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge is free to enter.
How do I get to Metropolitan Water Board Pump House Tower, Kew Bridge?
Drivers can navigate to postcode TW8 0EN. It sits within the Hammersmith and Chiswick parliamentary constituency.