| Orlando Power Stations | |
|---|---|
Orlando Power Station and Cooling Towers | |
| Country | South Africa |
| Location | Soweto |
| Coordinates | 26°15′14″S27°55′30″E / 26.25389°S 27.92500°E /-26.25389; 27.92500 |
| Status | Decommissioned |
| Commission date | 1942[1] |
| Decommission date | 1998[1] |
| Owner | City of Johannesburg |
| Thermal power station | |
| Primary fuel | Coal[2] |
| Power generation | |
| Nameplate capacity | 300Megawatt[2] |
| External links | |
| Commons | Related media on Commons |
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Orlando Power Station is a decommissionedcoal-fired power station inSoweto,South Africa. The power station was commissioned at the end of the Second World War and servedJohannesburg for over 50 years.
Planning for the construction of Orlando started in 1935, as the electricity demand of Johannesburg was rising faster than what could be met with the existing City Generating Station located in downtown Johannesburg. The location for the station was selected due to its proximity to water supply for coolant and railway lines for the delivery of coal.[1] Construction started in 1939 withMerz & McLellan as consulting engineers, but completion was delayed due to the outbreak of theSecond World War. The last phase of construction was completed in 1955. Until 1990 twoRobert Stephenson & Hawthorns saddle-tank steam engines (Nos. 7805Elizabeth an 0-6-0ST and 7398George an 0-4-0ST were used to move incoming coal trains through a wagon tipper at the power plant.[3]
The station was decommissioned in 1998 after 56 years of service.[1]
In 2006 work was started to transform the site of the power station into an entertainment and business centre.[4]
On 25 June 2014, the decommissioned power plant collapsed, killing 1 and trapping 5 others in the rubble.[5]


The two cooling towers are a prominent landmark in Soweto. They were built in 1951 to supplement thespray pond cooling system as this source of cooling was running at its capacity.[1]
Being supplied by sewage effluent from the Klipspruit Sewage Works, the spray ponds at Orlando were the first in South Africa to make use of this ready supply of coolant liquid.[6]
Both towers are painted, one functioning as an advertisingbillboard and the other containing the largest mural painting in South Africa.[7] The towers are also used forbungee andBASE jumping from a platform between the top of the two towers as well as a bungee swing into one of the towers.[8][9]
The tower was used for aFast Forward on theseventh season ofThe Amazing Race. The task was for one team (Ray & Deana in particular) to walk across a suspension bridge spanning one of the cooling towers 30 storeys above the ground.[10] In the movieChappie the power station is the headquarter of the protagonists, the two iconic cooling towers and the main building are decorated with typicalDie Antwoord artwork.[11] The towers also appeared on the Dutch television seriesWie is de Mol? where contestants in the premiere of the show's thirteenth season bungee jumped off of the towers.[12] The towers were mentioned in the Season 3, Episode 5 episode ofWild Things with Dominic Monaghan.[13]
In the second season ofSky One’sAn Idiot Abroad the towers feature asRicky Gervais andStephen Merchant attempt to get hostKarl Pilkington to bungee jump from a platform suspended between the two to no avail. One of the cameramen, however, does jump.