Kieran’s Question to the City Manager and Motions, Cork City Council Meeting, 24 February 2014

Question to the Manager:

To ask the City Manager, what is the status of the Blackrock Harbour area plan? Plus have tidal surges and sea level rise been taken into account re the proposed stepped down area into the tidal area itself? (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).

Motions:

That the Council hold a National Expo in Docklands in future years (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

That a Docklands Festival be established making use of vacant buildings such as Odlums (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 20 February 2014

729a. Cork Harbour, c.1900

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article, 

Cork Independent, 20 February 2014

Technical Memories (Part 72) – Markets of Ferocity”

 

The first speaker at the opening ceremony of Whitegate on 22 September 1959 was the Chairman of the Irish Refining Company Mr D A C Dewdney, who was introduced by Dr R R Lawton, general manager of the company (continued from last week). Mr Dewdney spoke from a rostrum erected at the end of the Mechanical Services Hall and behind him was the triptych which was involved in the formal opening by the Taoiseach Seán Lemass. Surmounting the triptych was a painting by Soirle MacCana’s of the complete refinery.

 

In the course of his speech, and detailed in the Cork Examiner Mr Dewdney recalled that it while William Norton TD was Minister for Industry and Commerce that the real seeds of the refinery were sown and it was through Mr Norton’s persistence and persuasion that the three oil companies concerned – Caltex, Shell-Mex BP, and Esso – came to accept the Irish Government’s proposal that the refinery should be built. He voiced the debt of gratitude the Irish Refining Company gave to the Chairman of the Industrial Development Authority, Dr Beddy. From the moment, the Refinery Company had decided to expend £12million on the refinery, they had co-operation from all concerned – government departments, Cork County Council, the Cork Harbour Board, and the Electricity Supply Board. Mr Dewney continued; “How satisfactory, then, is it for me to be able to place on record the fact that we were able to have the refinery built exclusively with Irish labour, running at times into over 2,000 men, and this, in spite of the complexity and technical demands of such an operation”.

 

Mr Dewdney noted that the problem of recruitment of staff for operating the refinery had not been an issue. People with the requisite skills or potential ability became available in the area in large numbers. Irish materials were also used. The Lumus Company were the contractors. All the administration buildings were designed by Irish architect, Mr James Rupert Boyd Barrett and built by the Cork firm of builders, Messrs Hegarty and Sons. Boyd Barrett had nearly half a century of practice under his belt and had designed many major buildings throughout Ireland, including the Department of Industry and Commerce in Dublin, four new churches in Cork and ten new churches in the Diocese of Kerry. Dewdney remarked; “This was an Irish refinery in conception and in fact. It started a new industry for Ireland and would make a significant contribution towards the steady progress of the Irish economy. It would give added impetus to the drive towards greater industrialisation”. Dewdney also spoke of a greatly increased movement of shipping into the Port of Cork. At that time, the refinery was operating at an annual throughput of about one and half million tons. Taking crude oil in and products out represented a very considerable volume of shipping he detailed; “I do not believe there is any industry in the world where competition for markets is fiercer or more sustained than it is in the oil industry”.

 

In his speech, Minister for Industry and Commerce Jack Lynch praised the Refinery Company’s confidence in the developing economy of Ireland. This he alerted to was further illustrated in that the capacity of output of the finished product was about 50 per cent in excess of the contemporary Irish market of one million tons per annum. This was to provide for an expected continuing expansion in demand due to increased use of petroleum products in railways, shipping, jet aircraft and commercial and private motor vehicles, as well as in industry where industrial fuel oil was expected to be used more and more as an alternative to coal.

 

According to Jack Lynch, Whitegate Oil Refinery would give permanent employment to over 400 workers. These were to be drawn from many parts of the country and it would provide opportunities for Irish workers to acquire training and to obtain employment as skilled craftsmen and in scientific and technical work. He described that higher technical, technological and professional training programmes were to be provided in the local vocational schools, in technical institutes like that in Cork City and in University College Cork. He argued that as new forms of training would be required every effort would be made to construct proper facilities. On this point, he highlighted the fact that many of the technicians amongst the refinery employees were products of technical schools and more than 50 were graduates of Irish universities. Indeed, about this time, and as a side remark the committee of the Crawford Municipal Technical Institute through the leadership of William Ellis TD began to call for a new technology college, of which it was to take another decade or so before it came to fruition (Cork VEC Minutes).

 

Jack Lynch also noted of Cork Harbour as one of the world’s finest harbours. He referred to the new Verolme dockyard in the course of construction, the construction of Cork Airport, Irish Steel Holdings in the middle of the harbour were planning major expansion, and a new fertiliser factory was planned. These are also worthwhile to have a quick look at in terms of the enormous technical expertise needed to carry them out.

 

To be continued….

 

Caption:

 

729a. Cork Harbour, c.1900, from Queenstown/ later Cobh (source: Cork City Museum)

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 13 February 2014

728a. The tanker Vasum, 1962

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 13 February 2014

Technical Memories (Part 71) – An Asprit de Corps

 

In the Southern Star, 28 February 1959, reasons were detailed why the Irish Refining Co. Ltd choose Whitegate for the site of their refinery. Dr R R Lawton, General Manager of the Company said at the Dublin Chamber of Commerce, that Cork Harbour was reasonably sheltered and in the initial stage of development it was possible to bring in tankers up to 35,000 tons. By dredging on a fairly modest scale tankers up to 45,000 tons could be brought alongside the Whitegate jetty. Further dredging should make it possible to bring in 65,000 ton tankers and it was for that size ship that the jetty was designed. Dr Lawton noted that generally speaking oil companies have the reputation of being good employers and the staff who joined a particular oil company tended to stay with it noting; “Each of the principal companies appear to develop a type of mentality peculiar to itself and have been able to imbue its staff with an asprit de corps, which is highly commendable”.

In the Southern Star, 25 April 1959, the tanker called Vasum is reported as the first super tanker to discharge at the refinery. Built in 1955 as the flagship of Shell Tankers Rotterdam, the 32,000 ton tanker was the largest to ever to visit Irish waters and she was the largest vessel of any type to tie up in Cork Harbour. Irish Shell Ltd were hosts to a large party of guests, which included many Irish industrialists and the captain of the tanker, J Sieben, who had just taken command of the vessel the previous Saturday. The captain was presented with two prints of old Cork, one depicting Cork Harbour, and the other, the Grand Parade about a hundred years previously.

Dr R R Lawton at a press conference in mid August 1959, held at the oil refinery, noted that all the products that the refinery was capable of manufacturing were being produced. They were butane gas for lighting and heating, propane gas for welding, premium and regular motor spirit, tractor vapourising oil, jet fuel for planes and diesel oil. At the time, the Calor Gas Company were building premises in Midleton for the distribution of butane and propane, which formerly were imported. The Kosane-gas Company, a Danish firm, were also seeking a site in Midleton. Their needs were supplied by Whitegate. The first shipment of petrol was sent to Cork on 7 August 1959, just two years after the first sod was turned. This was deemed very positive in view of bad winters in 1957 and 1958 and poor weather in the summer of 1958. Mr Lawton also noted that Whitegate was the only air cooled refinery in Europe. It has cost £11,000,000, and £3,000,000 of that was spent on Irish contracts and wages.

When Taoiseach Seán Lemass officially opened the £12 million oil refinery at Whitegate on 22 September 1959, he said the undertaking was as “modern and efficient as human skill and equipment could make it”. The Cork Examiner on 23 September 1959 remarked that the symbolic opening ceremony was marked by a celebration party attended by some three hundred guests. Lemass remarked that the establishment of a new major industrial undertaking was always an occasion for rejoicing; “the function celebrates a very significant development in the extension of Irish manufacturing industry. It is appropriate therefore, that so many representative people should be assembled here to wish success to the new enterprise…The industrial progress of Ireland is a long road, to which indeed there is no end, but an occasion like this when a new milestone is passed, we can look back on how far we have come, and in that way, find encouragement to face the problems that are still ahead, Whatever problems or new difficulties the future may bring they cannot be any greater than those we have already encountered and surmounted”.

The ceremony took place in the vast mechanical services building close to the processing area of the refinery. There, Seán Lemass turned the miniature valve locking together the small panels of a mahogany and silver triptych, the silver engravings of which symbolised the old and the new – the round towers and horse ploughs of yesteryear the refinery fractionating towers and the motor ploughs of today-and in which the centre panel showed the refinery jetty projecting into Cork Harbour towards Cobh.

The symbolic opening was the culmination of one of the largest celebration parties ever staged in the country by the directors of the Irish Refinery Co Ltd. The guests from overseas were flown from London to Dublin on the Monday and the entire Dublin and overseas party travelled to Midleton by train, the Cork contingent joining them at Kent Station. Mr Lemass arrived at Whitegate in a car, and there inspected a guard of honour of Gardai Siochana under Chief Superintendent J O’Dowd. At Midleton, the party entered a fleet of buses to complete their journey to the refinery. All along the route people lined the route to wave at the ten buses and private cars which went by.

 

To be continued…

 

Caption:

728a. The tanker, Vasum, 1962 (source: Cork City Library)

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 6 February 2014

727a. Aerial view of Whitegate Oil Refinery

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 6 February 2014

Technical Memories (Part 70) – Whitegate Oil Ventures”

 

Following on from the use of oil in the 1950s in the ESB Marina Power station, the petroleum industry in Ireland at that time was such a prodigious business that it was the most costly import and the greatest source of customs duty except tobacco. The Leitrim Observer reported on 12 January 1957 that some 262 million gallons were imported at a cost of £13,667,000 (against approx £10 ½ million each for coal, motor-cars and wheat-maize). As an offset the government accepted the joint proposal of Shell-Mex and B.P. Ltd., Caltex and Esso to erect and to operate a new £12million refinery at Whitegate (Cork), which was officially opened on 22 September 1959. Its annual capacity was initially proposed to supply Ireland’s total petroleum needs.

The situation in Ireland was hardly dissimilar from the rest of Western Europe, which, because of thinning coal seams and manpower shortage, persisting since the end of the World War, was forced to turn to oil to bridge the gap between the growing demand and the capacity of native resources to provide it. Ireland’s demand for electricity grew faster than the country’s water power and turf resources could produce it. Industrial production was expanding. The era of cheap and plentiful and supplies available were insufficient to meet all demands. Oil was the only alternative.

In 1938 the last pre war year for which supplies were available without limitation, Ireland consumed 73 million gallons of petroleum products. In 1955 consumption had risen to 262 million gallons. The growth of automotive transportation alone did not account for this increase in demand. Motor fuel, in 1938, represented 58 per cent of all petroleum products imported. In 1955 it represented only 31 per cent of imports. Much of the increase in Irish demand comes from new uses. In addition to industrial furnaces and the generation of electricity, demand for power on Ireland’s farms has been rising steadily over the past ten years. Irish agriculture, by American or British standards, was not highly mechanised. Nevertheless Ireland operated 27,000 agricultural tractors in 1955 compared with 700 in 1938. These 27,000 tractors use nearly 20 million gallons of fuel in a year. Consumption of both high octane and jet type aviation fuel was growing steadily each year and the modernisation and efficiency of our railway system was now regarded as depending on how fast it could be converted to oil fuel. Many industrial processes utilised the less well-known petroleum products – commodities varying as widely as town gas, church candles, motor tyres and paint. Petroleum had become an essential component of the economic life of the country and a stoppage of supplies would have brought transport and most of the country’s manufacturing industry to a complete stop.

On 29 March 1957, the Irish Independent reported that Dr J DeCourcy Ireland, Joint Honorary Secretary of the Maritime Institute of Ireland, in an introductory address at a film show given by the institute at the Cumberland Hotel, Dublin, commented on the importance of Whitegate Oil Refinery:

“The creation of the oil refinery at Whitegate, Co Cork could become as great a turning point in Irish maritime history as the foundation of Irish Shipping itself. The Oil Refinery could make Cork what it should be from its unique geographic position, the maritime hub of the Eastern Atlantic, with a complex of dry docks, free port facilities, up-to-date cargo and passenger arrangements, such as could ensure it the same rapid rise to eminence among the world’s ports that had in recent years been achieved by unknown ports like Gyndia [Poland], Vizagapatam [India] and Dakar [Senegal].

Eight months later the Southern Star on 23 November 1957 reported that on the refinery site the main activity was on Corkbeg Island where John Paul and Co, the Dublin contractors were engaged clearing the site and road building in preparation for Wimpey & Co to commence operations. Most of the bulldozers were concentrating on the clearing work and the new road was practically completed. Equipment for the sinking of piles for the seaward jetties was moving into position. A feature of the Whitegate traffic was the long trailer loads of steel piping being moved onto the main refinery site. The large pipes were to be used to pipe the crude oil from the tankers up to the refinery and the finished products down.

A few days later on 29 November, the Southern Star reported over 2,200 were working on the building of the new oil refinery at Whitegate. In addition the Refinery Company had already recruited a staff of 120 for the permanent running of the refinery, many of whom were being trained abroad but 43 of which were graduates of the National University. A large number of the 50 storage tanks being built by Tank Erectors Ltd. were now complete, each with a capacity of 23,000 tons. Work was going ahead on the jetty head and the dolphins for the berthing of the tankers. Piping had been laid along the jetty for incoming and outgoing oil. Four of the five towers were towed by sea from Liverpool had also been put in place.

To be continued…

 

Caption:

727a. Aerial view of Whitegate Oil Refinery (source: Cork City Library)

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 30 January 2014

726a. Aerial view of ESB Marina near completion, c1954, ESB Archives

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 30 January 2014

Technical Memories (Part 69) – A Sphere of National Life”

 

“Built to the design and specifications prepared by the Electricity Supply Board’s own engineering staff, the Marina Station is one of the most up-to-date of its kind in Europe. This station is yet another link in the ESB plan to double the present output of electricity by 1961. The everyday demands for electricity in every sphere of our national life show such a tremendous increase that this programme is essential if electrical self sufficiency is to be maintained (Editorial, Irish Independent, 7 October 1954)”.

Following on from introducing the Marina ESB station last week, the local press wrote of the plant as one of the most up-to in terms of using modern scientific breakthroughs and technology. When oil as a fuel was used it was fed from the tanker on the adjacent quay through an oil pipe line to the 4,500 ton oil tanks located on the far side of Centre Park Road. A pump house beside these tanks pumped to the boilers as required. Heavy fuel oil was used as to make it free-flowing enough for pumping it to be steam heated. Hot air was blown through a rotary air heater; the oil was atomised by steam and injected into the boilers. The jet of oil was burned in suspension in the same way as the pulverised coal.

Cooling water for condensing the steam was drawn from the River lee, and was circulated by four pumps capable of handling 54,000 gallons of water a minute. It was essential that the tubes carrying the cooling water be maintained absolutely free and unclogged. As river water was being used, a special screening and chlorination plant was installed to remove impurities from the water before it entered the tubes. Water for the boilers was provided from the Cork City water supply, and a 21,000 gallon storage tank was used to maintain supply.

Care was taken to avoid the dissemination of undesirable material from the 220-ft high chimney which served the station. Incorporated in the system was a grit collector where the grit in the gases was removed. Ash particles which fell to the bottom of the boiler were collected and sluiced out daily to a piece of adjoining waste land. This waste land set aside for ash disposal took in an area of 18 acres, and if the station were to operate on coal all the time, it could have filled up in nine years. A special testing station was established on the hill at Montenotte across the River Lee to check the deposits before the station was in operation and to ensure that no damage was caused to residents in the area.

The blessing ceremony was performed by Bishop Lucey on 22 September 1955 and was recorded by the Cork Examiner the day after. Owing to the disposition of the Minister for Industry and Commerce, William Norton, the opening ceremony was performed by his Parliamentary Secretary P J Crotty, Mr Crotty opened the outer door of the main block with a gold key and later cut a tape in the turbine room to signify that the station was now well and truly in official commission. The scissors was presented to Mr Crotty by the youngest employee at the station, the 14-year-old messenger boy, Liam O’Sullivan. The Bishop, Mr Crotty and all the other guests were taken on a conducted tour of the station. The chairman of the ESB, Dr R F Browne, welcomed guests. They were shown the machinery for the pulverising of coal to be fed into the three boilers and the two big turbines.

Later at a luncheon in the Imperial Hotel, Dr Browne noted of a steady expansion of electricity grids in the city: “It has rendered necessary the building of a large generating station…A station was first placed in commission in Cork in 1897 [on Albert Road] and it gave good service over the years. The station opened today is some twelve times larger and has an installed capacity of 60MW and can be readily be extended to 120MW”. In thanking the many contractors to the scheme, the list of names echo the ESB’s focus on the use of cutting edge western European technology. The steam turbine alternator sets, switchgear and control room equipment came from Siemens Schukert of Germany. Babcok and Wilcox provided the boilers. Transformers and other switchgear came from ACEC Belgium and AEG Germany and from Brown Boveri Switzerland. The main civil works were carried out by McNally and Co. Ltd and by the Irish Piling Company.

Mr Browne further highlighted that to meet supply requirements, there were under construction in 1955, two large and four small peat stations, two hydro schemes and a large station in Dublin, similar to that in Cork. Native sources of power were being relied on and the focus was being placed on water and peat. With water, Mr Browne noted that the scope for further hydro development was limited as 70 per cent of the potential power in the country had been harnessed. The remaining 30 per cent was in very small rivers and streams, which to harness were not cost effective.

To be continued…

 

Caption:

 

726a. Aerial view of ESB Marina near completion, c.1954 (ESB Archives, Dublin)

Kieran’s Question to the City Manager and Motions, Cork City Council Meeting, 27 January 2014

 Question to the Manager:

To ask the Manager is it his intention to mark, through an event or festival, the tenth anniversary in 2015 of the city’s European Capital of Culture award? (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

 

Motions:

That the Council would remove the untidy and dumped earthen material at the end of Hillgrove Lawn, South Douglas Road as it aligns with Glencurrig Estate wall (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).

That the Council and City and Region would campaign to host a leg of the America’s Cup sailing competition (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 23 January 2014

725a. ESB Marina Station, Present Day

 

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 23 January 2014

Technical Memories (Part 68) – Down the Marina”

 

With plenty of opportunities for technological minded students and workers, the second of the ESB’s led projects in 1950s Cork was that that of the steam powered station on The Marina. Irish industry showed an overwhelming preference for electric power because of its availability, economy and convenience. The demand showed an increase of 49 million units in 1953 – an increase of 47 per cent in the number of units used by consumers connected under rural electrification and a figure which strongly demonstrated the necessity for such extra electrical power. The Irish Independent remarked; “Every day more and more farmers are making use of electricity for such everyday tasks as milking, churning, root pulping, grinding and so on. The farmer’s wife has a big welcome for such amenities as a cooker, washing machine, a kettle, an iron or a refrigerator, formerly available only to her city sister”. 

Up to the late 1940s, power came from Ardnacrusha, Pigeon House on the Liffey, and Alleywood or Portarlington. In the event of Ardnacrusha not operating for any reason, power had to be transmitted over long distance, which, experience had shown was an unsatisfactory arrangement. Before World War II, this possible difficulty was foreseen and plans were laid by the ESB for a Cork station. Owing to immediate post-war difficulties the preliminary work could not be undertaken until 1950, and the near completion of such a big undertaking in such as short space of time represented a ‘notable achievement’.

On 7 October 1954, the Irish Independent wrote about the Marina station near completion. Construction began in 1951. Operating from 1954, it fed electric power into the national network for use in homes, factories, streets, highways and farms throughout the south of Ireland. The station was the seventh power station to go into operation since the end of the war. For the preliminary development of the station two 30,000 kw steam turbo-generating sets were installed. These gave an annual estimated output of 240 million units per year. These turbines were the biggest in use in Ireland and were of the latest two-cylinder type and generated the electricity at 105kv. Transformers stepped up this figure to 110kv for easier transmission with minimum losses. A series of step-down transformers assisted in the ultimate delivery to the consumer at 220 volts. Steam was delivered to the two steam turbines at 850 F. The output from these sets was regulated from the station control room. Visual audible warning signs were given to the engineer in charge of the control room in the event of any fault developing in the plant. The station was linked to the central Load Despatch Office in Dublin.

The Marina Station occupied a commanding location on a 13 acre site facing Cork quays, its towering brick-fronted bulk was deemed as the Irish Independent noted as having a “pleasing architectural alignment with the extensive structures of adjacent industrial undertakings”. Surrounding it was Messrs Henry Ford and Son’s Motor assembly works, Dunlops Ltd rubber factory; and the mills, with their towering silos of the Cork Milling Co. Ltd and National Flour Mills Ltd. The selection of the Marina station site was influenced by its excellent access by road and the availability of deep-water wharfage for the unloading of coal and oil directly from ships.

There were many features of the new Marina station, which gave it a cutting technological status. It was the first of its kind to use both oil and coal for primary generation. The station’s fuel consumption was to be in the region of 120,000 tons of coal or 80,000 tons of oil. The reason that either coal or oil could be used to provide the necessary steam power was linked to cheaper operating costs. These fuels were competitive and the station was to operate on whichever was the cheaper at any given time.

The three huge boilers used in the station scored several notable ‘firsts’. They were the largest ever to be installed in Ireland and were of the very latest pattern; they were the first of their type to be used in Ireland for the generation of electricity. Capable of producing 600,000 lbs of steam per hour under normal operating conditions, they could rise to 660,000 lbs should the occasion demand.

In the event of coal being used it was unloaded at the wharf by a transporter crane capable of handing 120 tons an hour. This transporter delivered to bunkers beside the boilers or to the main coal yard, which could accommodate 60,000 tons of coal. A drag scaper distributed the coal around the yard and reloaded it on to the conveyors for transportation to the bunkers. Each boiler had a bunker capacity of 270 tons of coal which represented over a day’s storage –each boiler using about ten tons an hour. The coal from the bunkers fell onto weighers on the floor below and from there went to the ball-type mills which pulverised it. Hot air, blown through the mill, carried the pulverised coal away to the boilers where it ignited as it entered the furnace.

To be continued…

Captions:

 

725a. ESB Marina station, present day (picture: Kieran McCarthy)