Meaford Power Station

Meaford Power Station
Meaford Power Station
Country England
Location Staffordshire, West Midlands
Coordinates 52°55′33″N 2°09′59″W / 52.9257°N 2.1665°W / 52.9257; -2.1665Coordinates: 52°55′33″N 2°09′59″W / 52.9257°N 2.1665°W / 52.9257; -2.1665
Commission date 1948
Decommission date 1991
Operator(s) Central Electricity Generating Board
Power station information
Primary fuel Coal-fired
grid reference SJ889365

Meaford Power Station was a coal-fired power station situated on the River Trent at Meaford near Stone in Staffordshire.

Contents

History

Meaford A

Work began on the new power station in 1945, and was completed in 1948. The station was to later be known as Meaford A power station. It had a generating capacity of 120 megawatts (MW), comprising four 30 MW turbo-alternators, fed by boilers on a 'range system'. It had two brick chimneys, one at either end of the station, and two 250 ft (76 m) tall concrete cooling towers. Generation ceased in 1974, and the station was completely demolished by 1982.

Meaford B

Meaford B power station was located to the south of A station. The station was built using numerous Main and Sub-Contractors to include G. Percy Trentham Ltd (Excavations, roads, railway sidings, superstructure etc), Cleveland Bridge and Engineering Co Ltd (Station steel frame), P.C. Richardson & Co (Chimney), Babcock and Wilcox Ltd (Boiler Plant), British Thomson-Houston Co Ltd (Turbo-Alternators) and many contractors.

Construction work on it began in 1951, with completion and formal opening on 4 October 1957. It was of 240 MW generating capacity, comprising four 60 MW British Thomson-Houston turbo alternators. These were initially rated at 65 MW, but later at 60 MW. Steam was provided by four Babcock & Wilcox boilers. These fed steam at 515,000 lbs per hour, with a steam temperature of 1,065 deg F (566 deg C) and 1,500 psi operating pressure. The station was built on the 'unit' or 'set' principle where one boiler fed one turbo alternator. It had one centrally placed, brick built chimney, which stood at 408 ft (124 m) tall. System water was cooled by three 250 ft (76 m) tall cooling towers. The station was of brick cladding construction over a steel frame, which supported the four boilers from the roof. Its design efficiency was 31.41%.

The station was initially operated by the Central Electricity Authority which shortly after the formal opening became the Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB), and the 'B' station was quite an efficient station for much of its life, and won a number of trophies within the Board. Investment continued in the late 1980s, principally to reduce smoke and sulphur emissions. With the cessation of the CEGB as an entity on the 31 March 1990, the B station was allocated to National Power - the larger of the two conventional power companies formed from the CEGB at privatisation. Generation continued through 1990, until late September that year, when it was announced that B station was to close imminently: ie when the coal in the bunkers on the station had run out. This occurred with the tripping of No 2 unit at 1pm on the 28 September 1990. Formal closure didn't take place until the 1 October 1991. Demolition of the station then commenced, and was completed on the 6 June 1996 with the felling of the chimney, which made the national television news that day.[1][2][3]

Two steam railway locomotives and two diesel railway locomotives are preserved at heritage railways in Northern England and the Midlands (Foxfield Light Railway).

Site largely empty as at October 2011 apart from operational 'B' and 'C' substations for the National Grid though some 'A' station buildings are occupied for business use.

References

  1. ^ Meaford B Power Station. Central Electricity Authority. 1957. 
  2. ^ Welcome to Meaford. CEGB. February 1964. 
  3. ^ The CEGB story. CEGB. 30 March 1990. 

External links

  • YouTube - demolition of the station's cooling tower
  • Photos - photos of power stations in Staffordshire, including some of Meaford

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