Effort to provide an organised sanitation and drainage facility for Calcutta’s (India) annual inundation events during monsoon and high tides in the River Hooghly was initiated by Lord Wellesley in 1803. Subsequently, the Lottery Committee (1809) and Fever Committee (1840) worked on relieving the city from its waterlogging and sanitation problems. Its extremely unhygienic sanitary conditions, filthy status of drains and high rate of disease propagation and sickness could only be compared with the infamous ‘Great Stink’ of London (1858). Contemporary to the works being executed by Sir Joseph Bazalgette for developing London’s central sewerage system, Calcutta’s first brick-sewer system was adopted for construction in 1858 and was commissioned in 1868. Several sanitation schemes were proposed, but the one put forward by William Clark was taken up following extensive review. Calcutta witnessed the golden era of large-diameter brick-sewer construction over the following decades. By 1890, Calcutta was provided with almost 300 km of centralised sewer network. This paper documents the history of the development of this combined sewerage and drainage system, the oldest stretches of which were recently rehabilitated.
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November 2020
Editors
Research Article|
November 01 2020
Victorian brick sewers for a clean flowing Indian colonial city Available to Purchase
Ayanangshu Dey, PhD, CEng, FICE, MASCE, MIE;
Water and Wastewater, Kolkata, India
(corresponding author: ayan1973@gmail.com)
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Declan B Downey, PhD, CEng, FIMMM
Declan B Downey, PhD, CEng, FIMMM
Principal
Trenchless Opportunities Ltd, Peterborough, UK
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(corresponding author: ayan1973@gmail.com)
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
April 13 2019
Accepted:
August 14 2019
Online ISSN: 1757-9449
Print ISSN: 1757-9430
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2020
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage (2020) 173 (4): 131–145.
Article history
Received:
April 13 2019
Accepted:
August 14 2019
Citation
Dey A, Downey DB (2020), "Victorian brick sewers for a clean flowing Indian colonial city". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage, Vol. 173 No. 4 pp. 131–145, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jenhh.19.00012
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