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Report - - Govan dry docks..Glasgow, July 2020 | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Govan dry docks..Glasgow, July 2020

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Mikeymutt

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Whilst staying the week with girlfriend we was watching a programme and this come up on it. It looked interesting so a quick look on maps and was easy to find, as I was literally five mis away driving home, I stopped for a quick look and ended up being here ages. The site is quite extensive and takes a fair bit of walking too get around it. The site is trashed but its very interesting, with a lot of remaining features still when you look properly. It makes for a nice relaxed wander around for a while and one of them places you do not get the scale of it unless you see the docks with your own eyes. with ship building on the Clyde around Glasgow growing at a rapid rate a need for some dry docks for repairs and overhauls. So three docks were built between 1869 and 1898. the first dock was opened in 1875, the second in 1875 and the third and largest one in 1897 at a cost of £241,000 pounds. the dock its self measured 880 feet long, and 115 feet wide at the top. the docks would operate by sailing a boat in, then closing the large gates, the pump houses would use four steam driven pumps to pump the water out. So effective these pumps were, that dock three could be emptied in roughly two hours. Workers could enter the lower reaches of the docks by steps along the dock walls to carry out repairs on the undersides. the inside of the docks were constructed with granite blocks, many of these were hand carved. to me the docks are another superb example of Victorian engineering. The docks remained in use till 1988 when they finally closed. The site has remained derelict since, there has been talk many times of restoration, but nothing has come of it yet. The docks and the remaining pump house at dock one are grade listed.

The remains of the old Victorian pump house at dock one.

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Inside the pump house were the centrifugal pumps were are the old pump bases. filled with water and litter.

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Looking down the side of dock one and pump house.

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Steps into dock one.

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looking at dock two shows the gates that would be opened to let the ships in and out.

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Each dock has its own walkway going over the gates. some in better condition than others.

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Not totally sure what this did.

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Looking across dock one

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Dock two bridge with levering arms on a roller system.

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Double steps for dock two.

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Nice to see the manufacturers name on the anchoring points.

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Dock three, which is one the largest dry docks in the UK.


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The sunken remains of dock three pump house.

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The rails for the dock side cranes remain everywhere.

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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Nice, always fancied a wander here myself but never even been near Glasgow.

The shafts going down are sluice gates for letting water in and out through underground tunnels - they're usually arranged in symmetrical pairs and either manually wound or powered by pressurised water from the pump house + accumulator.
 

Calamity Jane

i see beauty in the unloved, places & things
Regular User
What a lovely wander, cool shots, looks peaceful. I did one the other day down our local creek. I did photograph lock gates and bits but have no idea what each bit does, hence no report lol.
 

Mikeymutt

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Nice, always fancied a wander here myself but never even been near Glasgow.

The shafts going down are sluice gates for letting water in and out through underground tunnels - they're usually arranged in symmetrical pairs and either manually wound or powered by pressurised water from the pump house + accumulator.
Thank you very much..I thought you might know what they were. You should go if you ever go Glasgow. I am sure you would find more and know more than me.
 

Mikeymutt

28DL Regular User
Regular User
What a lovely wander, cool shots, looks peaceful. I did one the other day down our local creek. I did photograph lock gates and bits but have no idea what each bit does, hence no report lol.
Thank you very much. Deffo a relaxed wander on a lovely morning. You should post a report. A little history is all you need. Ha ha I just guessed what most of this was
 

urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Thank you very much..I thought you might know what they were. You should go if you ever go Glasgow. I am sure you would find more and know more than me.
Don't think there is much more to find really unless you want to go swimming in the pools looking for pumps, or the docks get drained at some stage.

Not that it matters, but the 'anchoring points' you showed are capstans for moving vessels around, probably hydraulic - all the plumbing for these and the sluices will be underground.
 

Mikeymutt

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Don't think there is much more to find really unless you want to go swimming in the pools looking for pumps, or the docks get drained at some stage.

Not that it matters, but the 'anchoring points' you showed are capstans for moving vessels around, probably hydraulic - all the plumbing for these and the sluices will be underground.
Yeah I don't fancy going in the water ha ha. Not very good in water. Thanks for the info in the anchor points what are not anchor points..you must have great knowledge on all this sort of stuff.
 

dweeb

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Was watching "1917" recently and said to the wife "I recognise that place!"
Been about 15 years since we did it. Looks about the same!
 

TheSocialSelf

28DL Member
28DL Member
I worked at this dock between 1980 and 1984. I was an apprentice marine fitter. I think I was the last apprentice to come through the yard as it closed not long after I left and there was only two of us when I worked there.

I know this place well and seen all three docks working when it was a functional ship repair yard.. It was antiquated then and how they kept the 100 year old technology working was a testament to the skill of the engineering team.

There was a couple of full time maintenance guys but if the ship repair work dried up for a week or two then we were all given maintenance duties e.g stripping pumps, replacing bearings etc.

It was some place. I watched the film 1917 the other day and recognised the dry dock ( I'm pretty sure it was No 3) right away.
 

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