New Pump House
The New Pump House, also known as the Byrd Park Pump House, is a historic pumping station that served the city of Richmond, Virginia from 1883 to 1924.
Description
Constructed between 1881 and 1883, the building is a three-part, "I" plan, Gothic Revival style granite structure. It features a steeply pitched roof, projecting gables, Gothic arches, and lancet windows. A one-story, L-shaped annex containing a coal-fired boiler, a hydroelectric turbine, and steam-powered generator was added in 1905. Unusually, the building features a large open-air ballroom on its second floor.Also on the property are the contributing Beaux Arts style 1924 Hydro Electric Pumping Station constructed of brick, concrete, and stucco and the 1881 Worthington Steam Pump Building, a one-story Italianate style pump house built of brick coated with stucco. The complex was built as the waterworks for the city of Richmond.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmarks Register in 2002.
History
A public water system for Richmond was originally proposed in 1828 and a plan developed by Albert Stein was approved in 1830. As part of this plan, a water-driven pump house was constructed at the west end of Tredegar Street. It was completed in 1832 and supplied the Marshall Reservoir until 1909.Increasing demand for water and fears of contamination from nearby cemeteries led to the construction of a new 55-million gallon reservoir starting in 1874 and ending in 1876. That reservoir, located in present-day Byrd Park, is still in use as of 2025. Later, in 1880, the city council authorized the issuance of $400,000 in bonds to pay for the construction of a new pump house.
Operation
The New Pump House, as it was then known, was first tested on June 29, 1882. City officials and dignitaries observed the test, arriving via a special train chartered for their trip. Work on the building continued for another year, and the building officially began operations on May 4, 1883.Due to its location at the Three-Mile Locks of the James River and Kanawha Canal, the New Pump House was designed to use the available hydraulic power to drive its machinery. Originally, this was achieved using partial vertical turbines, though these were later replaced by Leffel turbines in 1891. Three turbines powered three sets of piston pumps capable of moving of water per day to the nearby reservoir, an elevation of approximately.
Originally, the drinking water distributed by the New Pump House was taken directly from the James River and underwent very little treatment aside from passing through settling basins located upstream. Richmond would not begin chlorinating its drinking water until 1913.