Manchester Evening News

Gasworks wonders

The disused landmarks are to be demolished but campaigner­s want to see parts of the structures put in museums, writes

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TO some, east Manchester’s gas towers are just relics of a world which no longer exists. They’ve outstayed their welcome, and it’s time for them to go.

But for others - including the residents around Bradford Road yet to be touched by the billions in investment that’s poured into neighbouri­ng Ancoats -- they’re a symbol of home. Or, as Dr Jenna Ashton puts it, the ‘last reminder’ of a ‘working class heritage which is being eradicated.’

Dr Ashton is now spear-heading a push to ensure that this corner of the city gets to keep some of the towers after the National Grid demolishes them. The lecturer in Heritage Studies at the University of Manchester is keen to keep bits of the structure for posterity.

“I’m doing a project in Miles Platting and Newton Heath around communitie­s and climate resilience, so I’m working in the area and seeing the developmen­t around me,” Dr Ashton told the Manchester Evening News. “I have been interested in the gasworks for a long time. So much evidence of working class heritage has been removed from Ancoats.

“It was last May that I found out that the planning had been passed to pull down the Saxon Street holder. At that point I was interested to see if we could do filming to capture the final moments of these icons.”

Gas holders, or gasometers, such as those on Bradford Road were invented in 1824. They stored large volumes of gas from nearby gas works, with the iron frame surroundin­g an inner chamber which would lift depending on how much was being stored.

They became a staple of the skyline in major UK cities from the Victorian era, providing gas for the densely populated environs. In east Manchester, they hark back to the proud, industrial heritage of an area which once boasted a colliery, gas works, power station, brick works, dye manufactur­ers, iron works, rubber works and wire mill. The discovery of gas in the North Sea from the 1960s saw the gas industry in towns across the country go into decline, and with most gas being transporte­d via high pressure pipes, gas holders fell into disuse.

Dr Ashton fears the loss of the gas holders, one of which sits immediatel­y behind Manchester City’s home, the Etihad, and another in Holt Town, will be ‘disconcert­ing’ for long-term residents. “It’s a shame,” she said. “I think for this area it’s seen so much transforma­tion and change - they’re landmarks and there’s a great deal of loss happening which can be disconcert­ing for people’s health and well-being. The evidence of a working class neighbourh­ood has been eradicated. The hippodrome­s have gone, and so have the play houses. The gasworks are the last reminder of that.”

So far, the academic has organised site visits for the local community, and is in talks with the Science and Industry Museum to house a section of the towers in its collection­s. Its curator of engineerin­g, Sarah Baines, said that it has been ‘in conversati­on’ over a move to ‘record, visit or acquire samples from the site.’

“We are currently in the initial scoping and conversati­on stage, and will carefully consider any material in the context of the national Science Museum Group collection,” she added.

Meanwhile, the council has agreed to host a photograph­y exhibition, with ‘segments of the structures’ on display. It’s understood that this will be held in the Beswick, Miles Platting, and Newton Heath libraries. The aim of the exhibition is to celebrate Manchester’s past and the industrial revolution that we’re famous for,” Coun John Hacking, executive member for skills, employment and leisure said in a statement.

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 ?? PHOTOS VINCENT COLE ?? Dr Jenna Ashton in front of the Saxon Street gas tower in Ancoats.
PHOTOS VINCENT COLE Dr Jenna Ashton in front of the Saxon Street gas tower in Ancoats.

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