51°24′45″N0°22′17″W / 51.412569°N 0.371447°W /51.412569; -0.371447
Hampton Water Treatment Works arewater treatment works located on theRiver Thames inHampton, London. Built in the second half of the 19th century to supplyLondon with fresh water, the waterworks was in the past a significant local employer, and its brickItalianate pumphouses dominate the local landscape.[1] The waterworks are currently owned and operated byThames Water, occupying a 66 ha site located between the Upper Sunbury Road (A308) and the River Thames. The waterworks currently has a maximum output of 700 megalitres a day, and supplies ~30% of London's fresh water.[2]
TheMetropolis Water Act 1852 (15 & 16 Vict. c. 84)[3] first introduced regulation of the supply of water toLondon ("the Metropolis"), including minimum standards of water quality, transport and treatment, official oversight and approval of all new water sources, and the introduction of a complaints process. Passage of the act followed an outbreak ofcholera in London in 1849, and official concern regarding the level of effluent discharged into theRiver Thames, the main source of domestic water for London's residents. The key provision of the Act was to make it unlawful to take domestic water from the tidal Thames and its tributaries belowTeddington Lock. London's water companies moved their operations to sites above the lock during the late 1850s and early 1860s.[4]
Construction of waterworks on the north bank of the River Thames near Hampton took place from 1853–55 as a joint venture of theGrand Junction Waterworks Company, theSouthwark and Vauxhall Waterworks Company, and theWest Middlesex Waterworks Company. The original works were designed byJoseph Quick and constructed byJohn Aird, comprising sand filter beds to remove suspended solids from the river water, and three pump houses, one for each water company. The massive pump houses were constructed inGault brick to near-identicalItalianate design, with large arched windows and decorative balustrades.[1] Each pump house contained a pair ofCornish 'Bull' Engines installed byHarvey & Co.[5][6]
In 1867–70,Joseph Quick designed and constructed new works for the Southwark and Vauxhall company on the east side of Lower Sunbury Road. The building comprised two engine houses in the Italianate style linked by a blank-arcaded boiler house, and became known as theMorelands building after the two Moreland and Sons 80-inchbeam engines housed in the western engine house. The building was further expanded byJ.W. Restler in 1885–86.[7]
The original Grand Junction pump house, known as theKarsdale building, was extended to install a beam engine in 1881–82 by Andrew Frazer. The original Southwark and Vauxhall pump house, which became known as theRuston building,[7] was also extended in 1881–82 by Restler.[8]
TheRiverdale building, constructed for the Southwark and Vauxhall company in 1898–1900 to the east of the Morelands building, comprises a quasi-Elizabethan engine house holding three triple expansion engines fronting Upper Sunbury Road, with a long boiler house withaisles andclerestory set behind to the west. In the parapet of the engine house balcony the barge of the Southwark and Vauxhall company is set in stone.[7]
The westernmost West Middlesex pump house ultimately became redundant and was demolished in 1948.[citation needed]

TheStilgoe engine house, designed by A.J. Johnson, was constructed 1935-43 to the west of the site, housing eight steam turbine engines. TheDavidson filter house and primary filter beds were constructed 1936-47.[7] With the establishment of filter beds between Belgrade Road and Rose Hill in the early 20th century (drained in the 1990s to become Hampton Green), the Waterworks came to dominate the southern and western sides ofHampton. The various water companies were amalgamated into theMetropolitan Water Board in 1902.[1]
Once complete the Waterworks were among the largest in the world at the time, supplying over 400 megalitres a day and requiring over 100 tons of coal for the pumphouses. Coal was supplied on barges unloaded at Hampton wharf and moved by cart to the Waterworks. Difficulties with this arrangement led to the construction of the Metropolitan Water Board Light Railway in 1915. The Railway connected the wharf to the Waterworks and Kempton Park pumping station. The Railway also continued to a standard gauge railway siding at Sunbury station, which allowed for coal to be delivered via theLondon and South WesternShepperton branch line when the river was in flood or operators were on strike.[9][10]

In addition to water abstracted locally from the Thames the waterworks also receives water from other sources. Water is supplied via theStaines Reservoirs Aqueduct (built 1902) from theKing George VI Reservoir (1947) andStaines Reservoirs (1902) which receive their water from theRiver Thames atHythe End, just aboveBell Weir Lock. The aqueduct passes, and transports water from, theQueen Mary Reservoir (1924) and the Water Treatment Works atKempton Park, which used to be connected to Hampton via theMetropolitan Water Board Railway. Water was also supplied from theKnight andBessborough Reservoirs (1907) and theQueen Elizabeth II Reservoir (1962) on the opposite (south) side of the Thames. The Hampton works is also the starting point of the Thames-Lea tunnel (1960) which transfers water to thereservoirs in the Lea Valley.
The waterworks conducts a test of its warning siren (to be used in the event of an unauthorised or accidental release of chlorine or other hazardous material) every Tuesday at approximately 9 a.m. The siren is a formerair raid siren dating from the Second World War, and is audible throughout Hampton and Molesey.[11]