Our mission is to find, map, photograph and catalogue every stinkpipe in the Greater London area, though out of London is welcome too. Please send your stinkpipe pics here or to stinkpipes@gmail.com Twitter: @stinkpipes Holder of 6Music's Geek of the Week accolade, 1st October 2011

Friday, 20 January 2012

Putting Stinkpipes On the Map

Stinkpipe Map - Latest version
I was out around Chiswick, Shepherd's Bush and Hammersmith this week where, it turns out, the streets are swarming with stinkpipes.


A reminder that this was the location for Steptoe & Son

A new stinkipipe design

it had its name plaque - attached but corroded

then I saw this giant

complete with a name plaque

Henry Edie & Co, The Bow Foundry

and this which I'd already seen in the south east

AC Woodrow & Co

and this


Saturday, 7 January 2012

Stinkpipe Round-up: January

I'm thinking of making this a regular monthly feature, assuming there continues to be plenty of material....

Thames Water made more than a passing reference to Victorian stinkpipes on its website


"On his way back from the Boat Race in Chiswick, the Head of London Tideway Tunnels spotted the original feature (pictured), now shrouded by a tree, close to the Hounslow/Hammersmith border.
Unlike the ones being designed to ensure that air can flow through the proposed Thames Tunnel, the Victorians’ structures did not include any odour control equipment."



I found this on here - an online photo archive
It's in North Finchley....

Horsham Avenue, N12
http://www.friern-barnet.com/picture/number2236.asp
http://www.friern-barnet.com/picture/number2611.asp

These surfaced on the Geograph website
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/345482
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/120337

a cluster of Adams Hydraulics in Ireland
http://www.geograph.ie/photo/2392786

In Fulham on the A3219 / Dawes Road
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/864624

In Leamington Spa:

Leamington Spa
http://www.yourlocalweb.co.uk/warwickshire/royal-leamington-spa/pictures/page17/

a stinkpipes in Kent discussion here
http://www.kenthistoryforum.co.uk/index.php?topic=3759.0




Friday, 6 January 2012

Ch ch ch changes

early Ham Baker
typical later Ham Baker
Winter is kind of off season for stinkpipe hunting, in my opinion at least. The dark evenings and the cold temperatures make tramping about on suburban streets, photographing the finer details of Victorian street furniture, a little difficult. People seem far more likely to be suspicious of that strange person photographing - what? a lamp post? after dusk? So I come to rely more on the archive material, my own, and anything I can find on the world wide web. Therefore, and in order to shoe horn in a song title by David Bowie whose birthday it is this Sunday, I am reflecting on the ch ch ch changes in the design of a stinkpipe that has evolved over the years.

Today I'm taking a look at the Ham Baker. First though, just to remind you of what a Ham Baker looks like - you see examples above, on the left and on the right.

Already you can differences, but these two are also very similar.

and here's a close up of the name plate. The one on the left is near Oval, and you've got to look pretty hard to see the legend on there. On the right is how its supposed to look, this one positioned out in the wilds of London Borough of Bexley. 

So we move on what I presume was the earlier design - with a little bit of a pattern. Nice.


and I believe this to be the oldest design, this one found in Camberwell. There is no name anywhere on this one: 




And finally - here's the design towards the bottom of the pipe here...entirely gone in the later version. cost cutting I guess.

I will try to find other examples of design changes as I collect more examples.

I would also like to assure my readers that this stinkpipe blog is still very much alive and there is a lot of work currently going on in the background to consolidate and examine the data I have already collected.

Keep on stinkpiping!!