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Latitude: 52.2849 / 52°17'5"N
Longitude: -3.3613 / 3°21'40"W
OS Eastings: 307233
OS Northings: 266067
OS Grid: SO072660
Mapcode National: GBR 9Q.Y336
Mapcode Global: VH697.PTCS
Plus Code: 9C4R7JMQ+XF
Entry Name: Clywedog Siphon Inlet House
Listing Date: 28 February 2005
Last Amended: 28 February 2005
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 84112
ID on this website: 300084112
Location: On the W side of a minor road to Bwlchbryndinam Farm, N of the A44 and approximately 2km NW of Crossgates.
County: Powys
Community: Nantmel
Community: Nantmel
Locality: Gwystre
Traditional County: Radnorshire
Tagged with: House
Part of the Birmingham Corporation scheme to supply water to the city from reservoirs in the Elan Valley. The project began in 1892 with the construction of the reservoirs and opened in 1904. Chief engineer was James Mansergh, joined and later succeeded as project engineers by his sons Ernest Lawson Mansergh and Walter Leahy Mansergh. The water was conveyed principally by means of a subterranean aqueduct, but where the river valleys caused the ground level fell below the hydraulic gradient one of the solutions was to direct the water into siphons that carried the water under the valley floors. Siphons consisted of cast-iron pipes of 42-inch (10.7cm) diameter, the relatively small dimensions of the pipe being offset by the high velocity of flow. Each siphon was designed for 6 pipes but only 2 were built in 1904, the remainder being reserved for an increase in future demand. A third pipe of 60-inch (15.2cm) diameter was completed in 1939 and a 4th pipe of the same diameter was constructed in the 1950s. Each siphon has an inlet and an outlet house where water is channelled to and from the main aqueduct. The water flows into a bell chamber beneath the railed forecourt, then into the pipes situated below the inlet/outlet houses, which house valve controls.
A single-storey inlet house of brick with freestone dressings and rusticated quoins, on a rock-faced plinth. The roof is concealed behind a moulded cornice of reconstituted stone. The E side has central steel doors (beneath inscription bands now chiselled out) flanked by cross windows. The rear has 3 similar windows. The forecourt on the E and extending around the S side has iron railings on a rock-faced plinth, and double gates.
Listed for its special architectural and historic interest as an integral component of one of the foremost civil-engineering projects of the early C20 in Wales.
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