Exploring the Abandoned Eggborough Power Station - Before Demolition

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Urbandoned

Urbandoned

Күн бұрын

In this video, we share footage from our 2019 infiltration of the defunct Eggborough Power Station which ceased operating in 2018. When we visited, the plant was complete with a 60s control room, turbine hall, boiler house, cooling towers and chimney all still standing, which unfortunately isn't the case anymore with most of it having been demolished in the last two years.
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Пікірлер: 438
@Urbandoned
@Urbandoned 2 жыл бұрын
Be sure to tune in tomorrow evening on the channel for a livestream we’ll be holding, just discussing and answering any questions about our Eggborough infiltration. See you there!
@MrDavidht
@MrDavidht 2 жыл бұрын
Why was Eggborough notorious?
@dodweld
@dodweld 2 жыл бұрын
Worked at Eggborough for nearly 40 years - a brilliant piece of work - urbex at its finest
@BestUserNameUK
@BestUserNameUK Жыл бұрын
You'll know one or two lads from Agecroft then👍🏼
@TheProperPeople
@TheProperPeople 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic, what a place
@Urbandoned
@Urbandoned 2 жыл бұрын
Cheers fellas :)
@harryringpiece7976
@harryringpiece7976 2 жыл бұрын
You guys should do an explore together, 2 great channels, cheers. 👍👍
@spoolinturby1640
@spoolinturby1640 2 жыл бұрын
My favorite channel
@cruisingwithwilliam
@cruisingwithwilliam 2 жыл бұрын
I really like your video buddy keep up good work
@DavidJones-lj9zu
@DavidJones-lj9zu 2 жыл бұрын
I worked at West Burton between Retford and Gainsborough from early 70still 1990,and whilst this video gives you an insight into these giants you cannot appreciate the size the complexity of steelwork,wiring,waterpipes,steampipes and somebody actually designed it.What a lot people don't know is there's an awful lot of going on underground in the sub-basement.....very,very spooky when working up on the boilers at night when you could be up there on your own,your mind goes wild.
@hypergolic8468
@hypergolic8468 Жыл бұрын
@@freespirit1975 We mainly had, in the UK large stations, General Electric Company (GEC) (not the US GEC!) and Parsons - the company of Charles Parsons. The UK fleets was standardised over a number of ranges so rebuilds and swaps could occur, the down side was that they insisted that the UK nuclear power stations had to use the same turbines, with a higher boiler port temperature, which really was not good for nuclear stations operation. The Parsons 660MW units were the first to break the million HP scale, which is more amazing considering that twenty years prior 50MW was considered large. Also, from memory, and others may correct me as I could well be wrong, I believe the 660's were the first to use electric vs mechanical (nearly Watts style) governors at that size. What's more incredible is that they were hydrogen cooled stator cores and now that size can be air cooled! PS I appreciate these were 500MW units. They were really quick to load however.
@hypergolic8468
@hypergolic8468 Жыл бұрын
I say to people until you've stood on the HP end of a steam turbine on a winters evening peak, do you really have no idea of the energy in a power station: respect to the Unit Controllers!
@evanleebodies
@evanleebodies Жыл бұрын
I see that West Burton is getting a new lease of life as one of the UKs locations for a nuclear fusion power plant. All I can remember from West Burton was the Asbestos.
@aaronb1188
@aaronb1188 Жыл бұрын
Good point about someone actually designing this! That's what I was thinking when watching this. Amazing
@davidaston1644
@davidaston1644 Жыл бұрын
That looks like the place featured on the 1970s Album cover, PXR5 by Hawkwind🤔
@Petefx86
@Petefx86 2 жыл бұрын
And that folks, is what's at the other end of your light switch. Few even think about how complex making electricity actually is. We flip a switch, we plug something in, without ever thinking about how it got here. Thank you for documenting and preserving this station's history before it was gone.
@solomongainey838
@solomongainey838 2 жыл бұрын
Places like this, at minimum portions of which, should be preserved and turned into a museum for people like myself who are fascinated by the process.
@mrmotofy
@mrmotofy Жыл бұрын
Maintenance and repairs to the aging facilities costs too much.
@syproful
@syproful Жыл бұрын
One word “rust” . It is warfare to battle the elements.
@theplasmatron3306
@theplasmatron3306 Жыл бұрын
there's something unique about the control panel's appearance. The vintage look kicks ass.
@joemclaughlin995
@joemclaughlin995 2 жыл бұрын
Kind of ironic that we could now be doing with this PowerPlant on full flow to guarantee energy security. Great video!
@lilblackduc7312
@lilblackduc7312 Жыл бұрын
The "greenies" think they want limited electricity; until they have to do without, that is! 🇺🇸 😎👍☕
@mrmotofy
@mrmotofy Жыл бұрын
It's all part of a bigger plan
@TheDigger06
@TheDigger06 Жыл бұрын
Yup..used to work there, still running ok on the day it stopped mainly
@johnadlington7421
@johnadlington7421 5 ай бұрын
I can remember being taken on a visit to Eggborough Power Station by my father back in the mid sixties when it was being commissioned. He was a Consultant Engineer working for one of the contractors on the build. I have a memory of a control room and the turbines, for a 13 year old it was pretty impressive.
@Huwie73
@Huwie73 Жыл бұрын
My father worked there for 20yrs and was a Shift Charge Engineer (Chief Ops Eng) and I also was there briefly. I'm still in the industry and miss the proper Power Stations. RIP Eggborough. Thank you for your service Old Lass.
@williamwintemberg
@williamwintemberg 2 жыл бұрын
Having worked around this kind of thing for the first ten years of my working career, nothing I have ever seen compares to this station! So large and pristine! Times do change and nothing stays the same. I'm so happy you guys caught it in time! Thank You so much.
@StubbyPhillips
@StubbyPhillips 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent! Beautiful control room. So glad you captured it before destruction. Someone should arrange permission to officially document and, where possible, 3D scan such wonderful places before they're all gone. We owe it to all of the people who worked to create such fantastic things and to those who will never be able to experience them to preserve them however we can. Better yet, people with vision and imagination should intervene and find creative ways to repurpose these amazing places.
@residentelect
@residentelect 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent post. These engineering achievements should be preserved in the digital space, as in years to come they could prove very useful for training apprentice engineers, or for technicians who may need a refresher before attempting to repair an identical asset which is still functioning. We have lost so much of our structural engineering past. It really is very sad as we once achieved such great things.
@StubbyPhillips
@StubbyPhillips 2 жыл бұрын
@@residentelect It's unfortunate that the people with the money and the bureaucrats in charge of things tend not to have the kind of vision needed to do anything other than just tear such things down.
@edwardbyard6540
@edwardbyard6540 2 жыл бұрын
@@StubbyPhillips When Didcot A (built in the same era as Eggborough) was closed in 2013, they dismantled a great deal of the control room and gave it to the Oxfordshire county archives. There was a plan to do something with it in the town, but I don't know what happened to it. I went around the plant quite a few times and it was amazing - engineering on an epic scale that we'll never see again.
@highspeedgaz
@highspeedgaz Жыл бұрын
I worked in there ,installing control gear for a new soot blower control panel , fitting instrumentation into the existing control panels was no easy fit , very heavy gauge steel to cut through, but very interesting at the time .
@karlj711
@karlj711 Жыл бұрын
you can't appreciate just how huge these places are until you step inside, even then unless you actually worked in these places it's impossible to comprehend the noise, heat & vibration produced when they were in operation. I spent years as a scaffolder helping these places to run smoothly & for the last few years a safety manager for the demolition of this very station & also Ferrybridge. Some very mixed emotions watching these giants fall......
@donaldross4217
@donaldross4217 2 жыл бұрын
I worked on a shutdown at eggbourgh in the 1990 s I’ve been inside the boilers and ducts What a place to work Absolute huge
@residentelect
@residentelect 2 жыл бұрын
You ever work at Drax?
@donaldross4217
@donaldross4217 2 жыл бұрын
No but a lot of the guys had
@BestUserNameUK
@BestUserNameUK Жыл бұрын
Former CEGB fitter here👍🏼
@lordcaptainvonthrust3rd
@lordcaptainvonthrust3rd 3 ай бұрын
My dad worked at Eggborough for many years. As a child I was lucky enough to have several tours "on permit" Including when they changed the steam valves on the turbine hall roof with a helicopter so I got a helicopter ride too The immense size of the turbine hall was matched by the immense noise. On one occasion they were working on Unit 4 and had it disassembled Seeing the size of the internal components and 145 ton mainshaft has never left me Thanks for sharing 👍
@lizstevenson7801
@lizstevenson7801 2 жыл бұрын
Well lads you have just documented history in a way that no others have. This was amazing and the filming was very good, you must have been freezing but you all did so well. Thank you for this, well done 💕🇦🇺
@wolfrace-oe2mg
@wolfrace-oe2mg Жыл бұрын
Yes I agree thankyou for documenting & your dedication been able to look back at this place means something and maybe others that worked there
@THEMACINTOSH25
@THEMACINTOSH25 Жыл бұрын
You also support them trespassing by watching these video's. I have just done this and I want to ask why do you have to trespass? Why cant these guys go to the proper people (perhaps old managers or workers) with the proper liability insurance and proper Personal Protective Equipment (Steel toe boots, high vis) and make a real documentary.
@johnbailes7118
@johnbailes7118 2 жыл бұрын
I worked in this power station in the 70s as an apprentice. Great video thanks it brings back some memories....
@frasermathers2287
@frasermathers2287 2 жыл бұрын
Words cant describe how this video has blown my mind! Yes the scale of it, and that epic control room plus the fact it was still fully intact as if they had just got up and left the day before and the shear complexity of the station, but most of all, the effort that you all put into getting the footage and editing what is a truly outstanding video. When I seen the state you were all in and the fact that you had been inside for 6 hours then that is true dedication to your craft. Thanks does not seem enough praise, but you do have my heartfelt thanks and admiration.
@OregonCrow
@OregonCrow 2 жыл бұрын
k bye
@chrisattwood8701
@chrisattwood8701 5 ай бұрын
My grandfather was an electrical engineer there. I went round with him around 45 years ago when I was 8 or 9, I think. I remember some of the places, certainly the control room and turbine hall. It would never be allowed to bring a kid to an industrial complex now!
@Itsahardknocklife9690
@Itsahardknocklife9690 Жыл бұрын
This was an epic experience, my wife’s grandad joe smith worked on here as an electrician for decades. This video was a really good watch
@FrontSideBus
@FrontSideBus 2 жыл бұрын
I'm lucky that I'm old enough to live when you used to be able to go on tours around places like this when they were actually in service. When I was a younger, I stood on top of the reactor of Dungeness B while it was going and stood next to massive turbo alternator sets like those while they were all full load. The sheer noise was staggering and it was odd to see these so quiet!
@davelowe1977
@davelowe1977 2 жыл бұрын
Ditto. I've toured Willington coal power station and also Sellafield nuclear plant as a kid. I ended up designing places like this though so looking around them these days isn't so exciting!
@eddiewillers1
@eddiewillers1 2 жыл бұрын
Way back in the early 70s, my old man worked at Ratcliffe-on-Soar, another great example of 1960s CEGB design & build. I was lucky enough to get a guided tour around the turbine hall, control room, and inside the base of one of the cooling towers - this great video brought those memories back.
@aerialexplorer772
@aerialexplorer772 2 жыл бұрын
Same here, I took the Dungenss B tour pre-9/11 which closed them off. The power of the alternator sets at full speed was, as you say, awesome - the whole ground shook.
@NapierNimbus
@NapierNimbus 2 жыл бұрын
What a stunning place, literally jaw dropping scenes. So intact, unvandalised, frozen in time.
@rw-xf4cb
@rw-xf4cb Жыл бұрын
Looks almost Soviet at times or is it the other way round? Tesla battery power stations probably would look the same if they can last 60 years!
@montyzumazoom1337
@montyzumazoom1337 2 жыл бұрын
You got some nerve, but thanks for putting this up. I love power stations and I would have loved to have gone around that one with you. As an engineer, I can only marvel and appreciate what lies beneath those machinery covers. There was an amazing amount of machinery and equipment there. Everyone should visit a power station in their lives, most people take electrical power generation for granted without a thought about how its produced and managed. The control room was epic!
@poly_hexamethyl
@poly_hexamethyl Жыл бұрын
What a beautiful documentary record this video is! Makes me want to cry to think that this was demolished.
@42luke93
@42luke93 Жыл бұрын
Such a shame. Looked like the equipment was very healthy as if it could have lasted 30+ years to 2050 like it was designed to.
@davidowen7793
@davidowen7793 Жыл бұрын
Worked there in 80's electrical contracting, remember all the areas shown.
@shepshepherd9410
@shepshepherd9410 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Eggborough, my father worked in the control room as a unit operator.
@residentelect
@residentelect 2 жыл бұрын
Grew up surrounded by Eggborough, Ferrybridge, and Drax (still operating) power stations. At night you felt like you were on the set of Blade Runner due to all of the glowing aircraft warning lights atop the various cooling towers, chimneys, pylons, and the clouds of steam illuminated by the moonlight. Ever up this way in the future guys, be nice to see you take a look at the abandoned chemical works on the banks of the River Ouse near Goole.
@divyajnana
@divyajnana 11 ай бұрын
Great video and remembrance of Eggborough. An amazing industrial facility. Thank you.
@kennethstill5945
@kennethstill5945 2 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic film guys much appreciated. I started there in 1966 as a junior engineer to assist in commissioning in various areas. Two of us climbed to the top of the chimney, what a long slog 40 minutes as the lift was not yet working. It was the first multiflue chimney in the country. The generation starts with a (if I’m correct) a 240 v perm’t mag generator and is amplified via the excitation system to come out the main generator at 22,500 volts! From the main 400,000V swit’g station it went across the Pennines to Penwortham at Preston amongst other places. Sad to see all the big station being demolished, going to need a lot renewables to replace etc.
@marcobrian1619
@marcobrian1619 2 жыл бұрын
That was some time ago.......it's gone now My grandfather worked there almost all his life, he retired in the early 80s my dad worked in building drax power station.
@bruceaisher
@bruceaisher Жыл бұрын
Wow lads you really captured a piece of history here. Just read that this has been completely demolished now - to think of all the planning, engineering and man hours that went into making the plant operational. It really is a marvel to see it. Shame part of it couldn't be kept as a museum. With the current energy crisis it wouldn't be a bad thing to have something like this available for use eh. Anyway great video chaps and thanks for sharing!
@jimmymiller77
@jimmymiller77 2 жыл бұрын
FANTASTIC job guys. Just discovered your channel. Please, no apogee necessary. A great piece of work. Thanks a million for all the hours of work, all the risk and time it takes to put something like this together. All my best from the US, Jim
@patfra4070
@patfra4070 2 жыл бұрын
I worked there from 78 to 91 still looks same,great work guys John Ollerenshaw
@stevenramsay6691
@stevenramsay6691 8 ай бұрын
I worked at Eggborough as a Unit Operator then Assistant Shift Charge Engineer. Considering the units were and started up and shut down nearly every day, especially towards the end of its life, it was incredibly reliable and very flexible. Almost everything in the place was high quality and British made. It was an incredible place to see when it was all running.
@dct1
@dct1 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. I was lucky enough to have a permission visit inside Longannet power Station just before it closed. I can't describe how loud it was hearing all the turbines running. It's sad we're demolishing all these fantastic engineering marvels and we wouldn't be capable of building these power station's nowadays, all the skills have been lost plus they would cost an absolute fortune.
@person.X.
@person.X. Жыл бұрын
That is what is so depressing. These places come from a different Britain that was competent and forward looking. I bet 99% of the equipment in this station originated in the UK, a situation that is unimaginable now.
@59patrickw
@59patrickw 2 жыл бұрын
If it was not for this video how could you describe the sheer scale of the place to someone it would be so hard Thanks for keeping a bit of British industrial history alive it all show how you have evolved in what you present and improved so a win win all around
@kpurban1310
@kpurban1310 2 жыл бұрын
Such a memorable misadventure. Also made me strangely nostalgic seeing the mighty Peugeot once again.
@Test-hw5fn
@Test-hw5fn 2 жыл бұрын
Ironic it was the dash for gas that led to its closure. The madness of the dash for gas is it meant electricity generation became gas focused. Well now gas is very expensive pushing electricity prices skyward.
@residentelect
@residentelect 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, and that's why the government can't afford to decommission Drax power station, which is just down the road from Eggborough. It has capacity to power over two million homes by burning biomass, making it unfavorable to the Green lobbies, but that is a hell of a lot of people who would be without power if it was ever closed and not replaced with a suitable facility.
@amd4life89
@amd4life89 Жыл бұрын
It had bugger all to do with the dash for gas, that was back in the 90's. It was the dash to go green that killed it.
@simonstory5392
@simonstory5392 2 жыл бұрын
Spent many happy times on site designing / modifying the automatic control systems here, and the sister site at Ironbridge while working for George Kent.
@philipread7741
@philipread7741 2 жыл бұрын
It is a real shame these plants are being demolished in their entirety. The UK is hopefully going to build a fleet of the Rolls Royce Small Modular Reactor power plants, with a nominal rating of 470MW per unit. The former coal plants had units rated at 500MW, using steam at approx 565degC 160bar, reheating to 565deg C 40 bar, with a turbine, condensing plant and cooling water system to match. The PWR produces produces large amounts of hot fog compared to the superheated steam of the coal plants, so a different turbine arrangement would be required to work at these wetter and higher mass flow steam conditions. But these alternators were in a pretty good condition and well engineered compared to later designs of air cooled machines used in CCGT plants. (Specifically the EE and AEI 500MW units. ( Eggborough had a new one built about 2005)) For each of the remaining 2000MW coal plant sites, Repower two of the four Turbine generators only with modified turbines, build two reactors where the redundant boiler plant was located. Retain the Cooling towers and cooling water pumps and culverts. Hopefully save a load of money acquiring new sites, civil works, switchgear, and grid connection.
@davidgrisez
@davidgrisez 2 жыл бұрын
I worked for 34 years in Generating Stations with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power that burned natural gas and fuel oil in the boilers. The common arrangement of Control Rooms was to have one control room for a pair of generating units. That is the the Generating Station had 4 units there would be 2 control rooms. This Old Generating Station had one really huge control room for all four units apparently with the controls of each unit in a corner of the huge room. This is the largest single control room I have ever seen in my life and on videos.
@TheDigger06
@TheDigger06 Жыл бұрын
There was bigger.but not now
@fredziffle1991
@fredziffle1991 2 жыл бұрын
Such a shame places like this closed ... I recall working in control rooms like this as an instrument technician in the uk. I'm now 64 yrs old and retired living abroad.
@NBMedia8928
@NBMedia8928 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing, Fiddlers ferry power is next to be demolished
@DEAD-DROP
@DEAD-DROP 2 жыл бұрын
Hats off to you lads once again, always putting in a shift! You may not feel the footage is up to standard now, but you documented everything well and got some amazing shots!
@Fran_SG
@Fran_SG 2 жыл бұрын
The BEST vídeo of this kind!!!! Congratulations!!!
@HotAxleBox
@HotAxleBox Жыл бұрын
Urbex is so important for documenting the country heritage. This was a fantastic explore, many thanks for posting.
@christastic100
@christastic100 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely brilliant. Hard to believe a full documentary isn’t automatically done for historical reasons. This is historical information for future generations
@CJUrbex
@CJUrbex 2 жыл бұрын
went here few year ago, epic place! we got on site and met up with like 10 other people who knew how to get in, we got to see all of it once inside lol really enjoyed it for sure
@paulollerhead941
@paulollerhead941 2 жыл бұрын
That control room is something else! Well played lads, and well done
@MePeterNicholls
@MePeterNicholls 2 жыл бұрын
Went to an open day at rugeley power station decades ago. The size, the noise, it was astonishing
@surreyscouse2873
@surreyscouse2873 2 жыл бұрын
Ha, Rugely was a baby in comparison. Did 2 outages there. We were there, on the roof when A station came down and all TV reception was lost in the town.
@julieb5707
@julieb5707 2 жыл бұрын
Wow!! That was fascinating. I’m glad you filmed it before it got demolished. Thanks guys!
@Kwarduk
@Kwarduk 2 жыл бұрын
I live around a 10 minutes drive away from Eggborough, closer to Drax, and these three Aire valley power stations (along with Ferrybridge C further on) was like the central landmark of the area, if you ever went up in a balloon or a glider, the latter being very commonplace in the area, you could see all three of them in full steam back in the day, providing a massive 8 GW of power to the nation. They were truly the epitome of the industrial prowess of Yorkshire, but sadly, just like the rest of the fading industry, these power stations also faded away, Drax was a survivor since its operators were able to see the changing winds and managed to adapt accordingly, Eggborough and Ferrybridge weren't so lucky (Ferrybridge could've survived on too as a biomass station, but that fire they had in the coal lift basically doomed the station). It's real sad, I love coal power stations, the cooling towers pumping out the drift and the chimney acting as a spire of industrial brutalism over the land is awe inspiring, but they're a dying breed these days. Yesterday it was Willington, Ironbridge, Didcot and Castle Donnington, today it was Eggborough and Ferrybridge, tomorrow it will be Cottam, Aberthaw and Fiddlers Ferry, then later it will be Ratcliffe-on-Soar, West Burton, and who knows, maybe Drax will join her sisters in their demolition one day. I've personally always thought it was a big mistake to do this, saying to my friends and family that 'these people wanting to put their hopes in an inherently unreliable energy sources and who called these stations eyesores will quickly change their tune when their power is out and their bills are through the roof', and with the current energy crisis, this is one of the times I hate being proven right.
@elliottprice6084
@elliottprice6084 2 жыл бұрын
Jaw dropping. To film this colossal site before it was demolished was something special. Thank you for putting so much effort into making this video
@thomasmt84
@thomasmt84 2 жыл бұрын
Another amazing video guys! The difference in filming styles to your more recent explorations is noticeable but still very watchable! I love that you have the balls to infiltrate and document these places so that others can see too. I'd love to do some proper urbex myself but I'm too concerned about getting caught. Top work as always and look forward to many more :-)
@1marktanderson
@1marktanderson Жыл бұрын
That looks like a Blast to sneak into there. I would be looking over my shoulder the whole time I was there but that’s part of the Fun! What a huge plant. Can’t believe it was completely abandoned. Thanks for the tour. I think I would have been tempted to take the red warning light in the control room! 😂🥳😎
@stephensmith4480
@stephensmith4480 Жыл бұрын
I came across this by accident and I am glad I did. That was amazing, you lads did a brilliant job, so interesting to see it all intact. The Power Station at Fiddlers Ferry in Cheshire is lying empty now, just waiting the same fate as Eggborough. I was over in Northern Ireland a few years ago and I got the opportunity to have a quick look around some of the old H Blocks prison, notoriously known as Long Kesh as it was also waiting to be demolished. That was an eerie place I can tell you. I thought about the type of people who had walked around those Blocks and Yards. I have just subbed guys 👍
@wildcorn12790
@wildcorn12790 Жыл бұрын
I fell like I'm watching a real-life tour of some of the levels in Doom. This is just incredible.
@kathyjohnson5290
@kathyjohnson5290 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the memories 😊
@michael42158
@michael42158 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant work. You are recording which is not being recorded. This is true archaeology.
@caveone-365
@caveone-365 Жыл бұрын
When you count that many cooling towers you know it's a big place. Crazy how they left all that good equipment just sitting there. Shame they demolished it, but technology never stands still it seems. Thanks for sharing! 👍👍✌️
@TheDigger06
@TheDigger06 Жыл бұрын
The owners stopped anyone takin anything whatsoever... didnt stop us though
@Bill-Phuk
@Bill-Phuk 2 жыл бұрын
I used to work at eggborough as part of the security team in 2004, one of our daily tasks was to run the mail about the station. I remember the control room was amazing. In 2018, just around the back was air liquid (a cryogenic plant) which I also worked. Basically eggborough decided that they wanted the land back as it was on a 25year lease. So they just cut their 11kv supply at short notice, leaving the plant to run on generators and instructed them to dismantle and disappear within a contracted period of time.
@TheDigger06
@TheDigger06 Жыл бұрын
Its what u get when u sell to foriegn firms,,, they rip everything of all profit then leave
@buffplums
@buffplums 2 жыл бұрын
9:39 HaHa “Cleaned by Stevie Winder” that’s brilliant 😂😂😂😂😂
@dodgycurry
@dodgycurry 11 ай бұрын
this may be my new favourite channel
@GodzilarOG7337
@GodzilarOG7337 Жыл бұрын
Love the music choice bro, well done and thanks for sharing.
@tomstandish6704
@tomstandish6704 2 жыл бұрын
This place should not have been demolished no wonder England is so short of electricity
@jereking254
@jereking254 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant! Simply brilliant. I was fascinated to travel with you the journey through the steam plant. It's gigantic and overwhelming. Seeing those 500MW turbine-generators was spellbinding. Keep "infiltrating".
@peterallen7938
@peterallen7938 2 жыл бұрын
Well done lads that was another amazing video. Keep the good work up. I do love the video power stations
@RobinWootton
@RobinWootton Жыл бұрын
What a worthwhile day out; and in light of the ending (I won't spoil it) what a priceless document. Well done, and thanks for sharing this highlight of your noble cause.
@madm4tty
@madm4tty Жыл бұрын
This was so well done, the narration, the history, the footage, the music. Above all, the appreciation of the whole experience really came across well. Subbed 👍
@Andrew-rc3vh
@Andrew-rc3vh Жыл бұрын
The music sounds like Banco de Gaia. I have the album on CD and it is great.
@grusiturbon
@grusiturbon Жыл бұрын
First time I watched this channel. Must give credit for the sound design. I’ve worked on a similar power station and this is exactly what I would imagine it sounds when everything is turned off.
@wolfrace-oe2mg
@wolfrace-oe2mg Жыл бұрын
Worked here in 2014-2015 loved exploring the place, my grandad worked their too and many other plants many will probably remember him as "nobby" lol at 4:40 in the video this was his favourite part lol winching. Shame to see the place go a real man's place of work
@lizzapaolia959
@lizzapaolia959 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video 😁. Grand slam ⚾⚾⚾⚾⚾. Thanks for sharing 🙏👌🙏👌
@tihspidtherekciltilc5469
@tihspidtherekciltilc5469 2 жыл бұрын
This video is perfect. The soundtrack is perfect. Mind blown. 💣
@sheilam4525
@sheilam4525 2 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic, interesting video and you have certainly captured history as it has now been demolished. Captivating watch. 👏👏
@michaelbarlow3686
@michaelbarlow3686 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for preserving memories of this power station, great commentary and video as always
@KbB-kz9qp
@KbB-kz9qp Жыл бұрын
Great video - thanks guys!!!
@kathyjohnson5290
@kathyjohnson5290 10 ай бұрын
To work as I did in such control rooms, is to say the least very satisfying 😊 rgds Terry in New Zealand
@OLIFAB
@OLIFAB 2 жыл бұрын
Wow that control room is breathtaking! Fantastic video as always!! 😁
@voyageur.engineer27
@voyageur.engineer27 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, you caught the history.
@felixthecleaner8843
@felixthecleaner8843 Жыл бұрын
what an awesome explore - truly amazing place. And to have a comment from the doyen of the Urb-Ex community The Proper People serves to show you guys have made and surpassed the grade. Top Notch material.
@dodgycurry
@dodgycurry 11 ай бұрын
i never realised this power station was demolished until about 4 months ago... i often drive along that stretch of A1 and remembered thinking ' i swear there was another power station along here'
@neilbethell2299
@neilbethell2299 Жыл бұрын
Used to do some work here over 10 years inside and out, good fun
@garymillerlcs
@garymillerlcs 22 сағат бұрын
Great video. Many thanks for all your efforts and suffering in the cold. It’s crazy that these were shut down for political reasons. When we start having power cuts soon on cold windless days and nights, the country will start to realise what we are now lacking. You are doing a great job creating a record of these fantastic pieces of infrastructure.
@katj84
@katj84 2 жыл бұрын
Wow what a video xx I was at work in cowick at the shooting ground a few weeks ago when the final towers was dropped and we felt it 😢 so sad that our landmarks for nearing home on the motorway has changed x
@davebroster8930
@davebroster8930 11 ай бұрын
Awesome video , your knowledge is fairly impressive for some young lads, I watched the Westwood demolition in Wigan 1989 👍🏻
@jameswest8280
@jameswest8280 Жыл бұрын
WOW! You made it out just in time.
@surreyscouse2873
@surreyscouse2873 2 жыл бұрын
Blimey, worked there as a contract rigger until 15 years ago. Also on Ratcliffe and Fiddlers (which are still standing) and others recently gone. Get in Fiddlers before they turn that into housing. I did almost 10 years of outages there.
@cogboy302
@cogboy302 Жыл бұрын
I met a bloke a few years ago who was a coded welder who was working at Fiddler's Ferry Power Station near Warrington, Cheshire, and I have a friend who used to work there as an engineer. It's a place I'd like to have a nosey around, but it's now closed & set for demolition. Driving past a power station like this doesn't give you any idea of the scale & complexity of the inner workings.
@johnschofield8159
@johnschofield8159 2 жыл бұрын
Delivered some parts required for this place about 10years ago drove the van inside to deliver them emense place,Men walking about with leather head protection against the heat amazing visit always will remember it
@nataliesmith303
@nataliesmith303 2 жыл бұрын
It may have been an early video but it was still a good one. When the towers went down it reminded me when I watched tinsley towers get destroyed in Sheffield 😢 The towers for many meant you were nearly home
@kimberleycannon6894
@kimberleycannon6894 2 жыл бұрын
Watching the tinsley towers drop was a sad moment, glad we attended though.
@tinytonymaloney7832
@tinytonymaloney7832 2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video, that place is vast. Still suprised to see no security about, there would still be stuff worth nicking. Shame its gone buts progress for you. Another spot for yet another housing estate no doubt.
@pethoviejo
@pethoviejo 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing! Thanks for sharing.
@geoffisaac3511
@geoffisaac3511 2 жыл бұрын
I remember working on them welding pipes so sad to see them now. But I don't miss all that heat and coal dust but I do miss the money I made. But I am retired now just like them now
@buffplums
@buffplums 2 жыл бұрын
The thing is though you say it’s not up to your usual standard, it is a real life capture of an experience and it’s still an exciting and gripping video to watch … I stumbled upon your channel by accident and decided to watch and I’ve already subscribed as I think you are going to be an interesting channel to follow.
@Zedek
@Zedek Жыл бұрын
You put it right. I also film "urban life", but that ain't a film set where you can just direct things. Most of my best footage is, ironically, the less choreographed ones because I captured said event, not that I had a time to put my tripod up or something!
@tunnel7
@tunnel7 2 жыл бұрын
Was there in the 80s on a visit on open day. Thanks, lads a piece of history now kept on film. In fact, we will be wishing soon it was still there getting the pits back open get self-sufficient again, massive mistake shutting all this down MASSIVE.
@meepthirteen
@meepthirteen Жыл бұрын
A Mechanical Wonderland!
@lizzapaolia959
@lizzapaolia959 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video thanks for sharing 👌🙏👌
@michaelboty2346
@michaelboty2346 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, you have captured something very special there.
@tomfrumtarn
@tomfrumtarn 2 жыл бұрын
Used to be able to see this place on the horizon from work. It was a good 20 miles away but being in one of the taller buildings in town on top of a hill you could see quite the distance.
@gordybishop2375
@gordybishop2375 2 жыл бұрын
Extraction feed water heaters add a lot of piping to just the basic steam path. Multi sectional turbines…High Pressure, Intermediate pressure and low pressure etc.
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