Chestnut Hill Waterworks
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The Waterworks Museum is a museum in the Chestnut Hill Waterworks building, originally a high-service pumping station of the
Boston Boston is the capital and most populous city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the United States. The city serves as the cultural and Financial centre, financial center of New England, a region of the Northeas ...
Metropolitan Waterworks. It contains well-preserved mechanical engineering devices in a
Richardsonian Romanesque Richardsonian Romanesque is a architectural style, style of Romanesque Revival architecture named after the American architect Henry Hobson Richardson (1838–1886). The revivalism (architecture), revival style incorporates 11th- and 12th-century ...
building. During its busiest years, the waterworks pumped as much as a hundred million gallons of water each day. The station was decommissioned in the 1970s, and later some of its buildings were turned into condominiums. After a period of disuse, the pumping station was restored, and in 2007 the Waterworks Preservation Trust was set up to oversee its conversion into a museum. In March 2011, the building reopened to the public as the Waterworks Museum.


History

In the 1850s, Boston began modernizing its water supply, which at the time was a combination of wells, pond water, and downhill piping from a Natick reservoir. In the 1870s, Boston city leaders decided the city needed to scale up its water filtration and pumping and began looking into options. In 1886, this 'high service' pumping station was designed, and the next year it came online as the Chestnut Hill pumping station - only a few years after the first such station in the world, in Germany. Water was pumped from this station uphill to the Fisher Hill reservoir, where gravity would then push the water to the surrounding area. In 1894, the station put its third water pump into operation: a steam-powered water pump designed by Erasmus Darwin Leavitt. The Leavitt-Riedler Pumping Engine, as it was later called, was promoted as "the most efficient pumping engine in the world" it was first unveiled, and remained in operation through 1928. In the 20th century it was declared a historic mechanical engineering landmark by the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) is an American professional association that, in its own words, "promotes the art, science, and practice of multidisciplinary engineering and allied sciences around the globe" via "continuing edu ...
. It was fully restored by the museum and is the centerpiece of its main floor.


Trivia

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filmed part of his 1992 "
You Gotta Believe ''You Gotta Believe'' is the second and final studio album by American hip hop group Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch, released on September 15, 1992. The album peaked at number 67 on the US ''Billboard'' 200. Two singles were released from th ...
" in the basement of the building. The building contains the stonework faces of its designer, Arthur H. Vinal, and his wife.


See also

* Chestnut Hill Reservoir Historic District * Leavitt-Riedler Pumping Engine


References


Further reading

* *


External links

* * * *{{HAER , survey=MA-24-B , id=ma1245 , title=Boston Water Works, Worthington Pump , photos=3 , data=1 , cap=1 , link=no Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts Historic American Engineering Record in Massachusetts Museums in Boston