Wapping tunnel Liverpool febuary 2016

Derelict Places

Help Support Derelict Places:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Lavino

Veteran Member
Veteran Member
Joined
Feb 4, 2015
Messages
465
Reaction score
1,523
Visited the wapping tunnels Liverpool and a big thanks to @blacksnake for taking us down there and giving us all the history of the tunnels. Also @telf @will knot and @dangle_angle thanks lads was a really good day and had a good laugh enjoyed the wirewool spinning and the dangley things hanging from the tunnel roof I really wasn't expecting them really nice. N with my history and a few pictures ....

The Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR) system provided the world’s first passenger railway stations where services were hauled by timetabled locomotives. The railway line opened on 15 September 1830 and originally ran from Liverpool’s passenger terminus [Crown Street] to its counterpart Manchester terminus [Liverpool Road]. The L&MR thus also became the first inter-city railway.

The route extended some 31 miles (50 km) and was an outstanding engineering achievement of its era. It included the world’s first railway tunnel under a major city: the 1.3 mile (2 km) Wapping Tunnel was bored through sandstone from Wapping Goods station, at the southern end of Liverpool docks, to the district of Edge Hill. The railway also included a viaduct, comprising 9 arches, across the Sankey Valley and a 2 miles long rock cutting at Olive Mount. When the line opened, George Stephenson’s locomotive “Rocket” conveyed a number of dignitaries, including the then prime minister, the Duke of Wellington.

DSC_0080_zpssxfn8wbd.jpg

DSC_0052_zpsfgtzcjrh.jpg

DSC_0083_zpsuwhiyoyv.jpg

DSC_0075_zpsqkotdls2.jpg

DSC_0071_zpswvjm9wyh.jpg

DSC_0072_zpsp3f7tks1.jpg

DSC_0063_zpsiyzatg6t.jpg

DSC_0060_zpsf8exonc4.jpg

DSC_0040_zpsihk4ywfg.jpg

DSC_0039_zpsgw2a92gg.jpg

DSC_0033_zps31ofbs66.jpg

DSC_0056_zpsek7ns7so.jpg

DSC_0036_zpsos0p1d16.jpg
 
That looks fun - love a good flooded tunnel. One day I'll have to go back to Liverpool.......What's with the upside down camera in the right of the first picture?
 
Not sure what's going on there with that camera lol
 
That's interesting. Was the tunnel fitted out for double track? It looks like it was. But the tunnel is in pretty good condition for its age, apart from the flooding.
 
these photos are stunning...
Top work

Might have to visit this place myself when I'm next in the area
 
Back
Top