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Panorama Underground historic hydropower station in bottom of IV shaft Kremnica

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Copyright © Karsten Ivan
 
 
 
 

Panorama Underground historic hydropower station in bottom of IV shaft Kremnica

Copyright © Karsten Ivan  - This image is copyrighted. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

This 180 degree panoramic shot shows the 4th water power station 240 m under surface built in 11.th kilometer of Hronska heritage (dewatering) adit below historic gold mining town Kremnica (Kremnitz in German) Left and in middle are two of 500 HP Pelton turbines, totally in right is 1000 HP Pelton turbine with generator in reconstruction. Nice old machines, allways under function.Panoramic wiew taken from 8 separate shots under long exposure without any auxiliary light.Thanks to the owner company for photgraphy possibility.

This Photo was Mindat.org Photo of the Day - 31st Jul 2020

This photo has been shown 475 times
Photo added:11th Apr 2012
Dimensions:8912x2079px (18.53 megapixels)
Camera:CANON EOS 60D

Data Identifiers

Mindat Photo ID:458500 📋 (quote this with any query about this photo)
Long-form Identifier:mindat:1:4:458500:5 📋
GUID:6d7e7c9c-9bdc-46d5-9823-4bd66cf96eba 📋

Discuss this Photo

PhotosUnderground historic hydropower station

31st Jul 2020 04:51 UTCHerwig Pelckmans

Hi Karsten,
Such an interesting photo! Thanks for posting!

So was this station built in order to pump water out of the gold mines, or is that an incorrect assumption?
Cheers, Herwig
ACAM & MKA (Belgium)

31st Jul 2020 10:32 UTCErik Vercammen Expert

I suppose it is like in the Harz: the tunnels taht were built to evacuate the water from the mine adits, is now used for electricity production: the water going down (height difference) makes the turbines work.

31st Jul 2020 10:35 UTCDavid Von Bargen Manager

It is actually  a power station in an adit used to drain the mines (built in 1921). Instead of a dam used to create a water head, it is created by the difference in elevation between the water level in the mines and the elevation of the drainage tunnel. They may also have used the mine levels to bring river water into the system.

On the  set on the left, you have the Pelton generator closest, then a flywheel and finally at the farthest is the generator. On the large machine to the right, the generator is disassembled somewhat.

31st Jul 2020 11:09 UTCKevin Hean

What ever it is, it is absolutely beautiful.

31st Jul 2020 20:31 UTCPaul Brandes 🌟 Manager

Certainly an interesting (and different) choice for POTD.

31st Jul 2020 21:27 UTChaytham ALI ali

 Blue Points seems to be the choice for seasoned field collectors.  My
dream house  only apprehension for amethyst in the area was to collect like fishing at a trout farm. (dumped leftovers and not real collecting)  I'll post something if I get lucky ;)  

1st Aug 2020 12:23 UTCEd Clopton 🌟 Expert

Interesting to see the aesthetic details afforded to a strictly non-public industrial facility:  patterned tile floor and lower walls, two-tone green walls, arched alcoves along the walls.  A similar installation built (in the U.S., anyway) after 1930s or 40s would have plain grey concrete floors and walls.  Attention to aesthetics in the original design gives dignity to the facility and shows consideration for the workers whose workplace this will be--something unfortunately lacking in more recent no-frills industrial environments.

1st Aug 2020 21:08 UTCDon Windeler

Really insightful note, Ed.  I had unconsciously registered that when I looked at the photo, thinking maybe it was a museum just because it looked nicer than an industrial bunker, but didn't think too hard about it until your comment.  It does make me wonder if there are any more recent industrial facilities that have tried to add an element of "the human touch."

Cheers,
D.
 
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