Engineers working at a Southern Water wastewater treatment works in Kent received an extra special visitor this summer, highlighting how times have changed in the water industry.   

Ray Chapman, 87, who lives in Westgate-on-Sea, is one of many members of the public who wander up to the Swalecliffe site in Whitstable, to take a look at the progress of a major project to redesign its infrastructure and replace and lengthen a sea outfall pipe.   

After talking to some of the workers on site, Ray explained that his grandfather Robert Brown worked on the installation of the original pipe many years ago – and he revealed a photograph from the time.  The picture below shows a team of workers in the early 1900s, with Robert sixth from the left. 

Ray explained:  

“I rooted round the house to find the photo because I knew I had it somewhere. I see all the excavators on site now and think to myself that the men who worked on the original pipe install didn’t have all that equipment – it was all manual labour.”   

Southern Water’s workers on site invited Ray to recreate a modern version of his grandfather’s photograph and presented a framed version to Ray and his wife Hilary, of the now and then images.   

Ray added:

“I was surprised and thrilled to be given a framed version of both photos. They will sit nicely on the mantelpiece.”  

Sally Ford, Director of Health Safety, Security and Wellbeing at Southern Water said:

“It’s fascinating to compare how times have changed with health and safety. Times were very different a hundred years ago. These days there is nothing more important than your health, safety and wellbeing at work, it is a ‘non-negotiable’.”   

Southern Water has completed the controlled sinking of a new outfall pipe nearly 1km long at Swalecliffe. The engineering feat followed work by a specialist dredger, called the ‘Razende Bol’ and excavators working on the beach. The work has involved digging a trench that runs from Swalecliffe Wastewater Treatment Works out into the North Sea. 

By Ed

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