China Daily (Hong Kong)

Old-style wooden water tanks hang tough

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NEW YORK — They are part of New York’s skyline and millions of people unknowingl­y depend on them: Behold, the venerable rooftop water tank, made of plain old wood.

And forget about technology and innovation and all that. The tanks are more popular than ever in this city of skyscraper­s.

Here, any building higher than six stories must be fitted to pump water to the roof for the higher floors, where it is stored in a tank. That’s because the pressure in the city water system is too weak to get it up there. Gravity takes over for it to flow back downward.

On this spring day, a tankbuildi­ng foreman named Terrance Stokes and his crew are at work at a posh building on Lexington Avenue on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

In seven hours, they will take down one four-meterhigh depository and replace it with a new one.

Their employer is Isseks Brothers, one of three companies that share the rooftop water tank market in the most populous city in the United States. In total, there are around 10,000 tanks.

The tools they use have evolved a bit, but for the most part, a water tank is set up today the same way it was in 1890, when the Isseks brothers, immigrants from Poland, founded their company.

“That’s the beautiful thing. It’s so simplistic,” said David Hochhauser, a co-owner of the firm.

Wooden water tanks — which also serve as protection against fire — have lots of advantages over tanks made from other materials, even atop a 400-meter-high building.

The cost is reasonable — between $35,000 and $100,000 — as compared to what a tank made from fiberglass or steel goes for — double or triple that much.

They are also quicker to install — just one day as opposed to at least a week for the other kinds.

Not in any books

Up on the rooftops, Stokes is following in the footsteps of his father, who retired three years ago, and overseeing the work of a crew whose very specific skill is the company’s main asset.

“It’s a very dangerous job. At all times, you have to be aware of what you’re doing,” said Stokes, a native of St Vincent and the Grenadines in the Caribbean.

This particular building on Lexington Avenue is just nine stories high.

But Isseks Brothers has also installed tanks atop the old World Trade Center and the new one known as the Freedom Tower, which soars 540 meters into the air, as well as many other Big Apple skyscraper­s.

The team works pretty much non stop and by 3 pm, water is flowing into the tank. It leaks a bit but that’s expected — it will take the Alaskan cedar used to build the tank two or three days to swell and become water-tight. The tank lasts around 25 years.

Isseks Brothers’ supplier is the Hall-Woolford Wood Tank Company in Philadelph­ia, which provides it with the carefully cut boards that make up a water tank.

The 160-year-old supplier’s workshop employs just seven people, and some of the machines are older than the people operating them. Nothing is automated. Everything is guided by the human eye.

“As far as getting it right, there is no book that can teach you that. It’s from generation to generation, from one worker to the other,” said manager Jack Hillman.

 ?? HECTOR RETAMAL / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Workers install a water tank on a building on Lexington Ave on May 9 in New York.
HECTOR RETAMAL / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Workers install a water tank on a building on Lexington Ave on May 9 in New York.

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