POWERHOUSE COLLECTION

Tank Stream conduit (section)

Tank Stream conduit (section)

Object No. 2001/11/1

Materially and symbolically, the Tank Stream is an important part of the history of European settlement of New South Wales and the subsequent development of Sydney as a city. The stream was one of Governor Philip's formative reasons for choosing the site for the Colony's first settlement in 1788. It rose in marshy wetland on the western side of the area now occupied by Hyde Park, formed a channel between present-day Market and King Streets, and flowed down to Sydney Cove, entering the cove at about the middle of what is now Bridge Street. However it soon became evident that it was not a reliable source of water and during a drought in 1789-90 reservoirs or 'tanks' for storing water were cut into the sandstone in its side. The stream was used as the colony's primary source of water for 40 years but by the 1820s it was so polluted that it was judged unfit for consumption. It was superceded as a source of domestic water by Lachlan Swamp located on the present site of Centennial Park. In the 1820s a tunnel was commenced to bring water from Lachlan Swamp. Named 'Busby's Bore', the tunnel was completed in the 1830s. As Sydney continued to develop the Tank Stream became an open drain and sections of it were variously diverted, channelled, enclosed in pipes, or incorporated into an oviform sewer. In the 1930s a new sewerage system was constructed and the Tank Stream reverted to carrying stormwater only. Writers, especially those of the mid-20th century have romanticised the Tank Stream. Said one in the 1940s, "the Tank Stream, that 'purling rivulet' which ... was the 'life blood' of the early settlement, and the cradle of the Australian nation, has been transformed into a stormwater channel that flows unseen beneath the city streets"*. Nor could the little rivulet be dismissed lightly, wrote another in the 1950s: "What building great or small, in the line of its course, has not bowed to its dictates? The AMP building is built partly on piles driven into the muddy depths. Many an owner has been committed to installing pumps to deal with seepages in basements. The throb, throb, shows that the stream is still alive"**. Another of those great buildings affected by 'the little rivulet' was the Sydney GPO. It was during the erection of this city landmark and the formation of Martin Place in the 1860-1870s that the Tank Stream, by then an open oviform sewer, was covered in at that site. Little more than 100 years later, the Sydney of the 1990s had become a city of 'adaptive redevelopment' and the GPO was subject to an adaptive conversion, transformed from a post office to a luxury hotel, with fashionable 'uber-chic' retail outlets, bars and restaurants. During this redevelopment the Tank Stream conduit was removed where it crossed the building's courtyard and replaced with a stainless steel pipe that now runs through the ceiling of the hotel's underground ballroom. Most of the old conduit was a 1940s concrete drain but a small section was a brick oviform sewer. Apparently as a condition of the redevelopment of the site this section was salvaged and part of it incorporated into an interpretive display adjacent to the 'food and lifestyle experience' on the lower ground floor of the GPO, where in situ conduit has also been exposed to view. The archaeological remains of the Tank Stream from King Street to Circular Quay are listed on the NSW State Heritage Register and are on the Interim Register of the National Estate. Such listings apparently do not prevent removal and replacement of those remains during redevelopment projects, not even sections that were built in the mid-1800s. However awareness of the heritage significance of such relics has at least resulted in the oviform section beneath the GPO being saved from destruction. This section is about 1.5 metres high and 1.2 metres wide and made of brick. Removing it from the ground intact and transporting it away was a complex and expensive operation that involved bracing two separate lengths of it in situ with expanding foam, then encasing them in a framework of steel girders. A metre-long slice was treated by a traditional stonemason so that it could be used in the display at the GPO. The two remaining salvaged parts, each around two metres long, were preserved by the development project contractors, Grocon Pty Ltd. With the assistance of heritage architect, Ian Stapleton, these were subsequently donated to the Powerhouse Museum. They are impressive artefacts, intimately associated with Sydney's development as a city. References: *Maritime Services Board of NSW, 'The Tank Stream', Port of Sydney Journal, January 1949, pp.81-85. **Brodsky, Isadore, Sydney looks back, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1957. Aird, W.V., The water supply, sewerage and drainage of Sydney, Sydney, 1961. Beasley, Margo, The sweat of their brows: 100 years of the Sydney Water Board 1888-1988, Water Board Sydney, Illawarra, Blue Mountains, 1988. Cumpston, J.H.L., & Lewis, M.J., Health and disease in Australia: a history, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, 1989. Dunn, Colin, 'Brief history of NSW and how it came to pass that plumbing would play a vital role in the well being of our nation', 1995. www.masterplumbers.com/plumbing/ authorit.../plumhist.htm State Heritage Inventory (NSW Heritage Office) www.interimtechnology.com.au/heritage/inventory/search/search.cfm No.1 Martin Place - Sydney's most prestigious address www.westin.com.au/westin2_No1_Martin_Place.htm GPO Produce: CitySearch http://sydney.citysearch.com.au/E/V/SYDNE/0075/28/75/1.html Stapleton, Ian (Clive Lucas, Stapleton & Partners Pty Ltd, architects and heritage consultants), letter to Dr Kevin Fewster (Powerhouse Museum), 16 June 2000. Ginter, James (Director, Traditional Stonemasonry Company), conversation with PHM conservator Dave Rockell and curator Megan Hicks, 16 August 2000. Bortoletto, Frank (Project Manager for No.1 Martin Place, Grocon Pty Ltd), conversations with PHM curator Megan Hicks, July-August 2000.

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Summary

Object Statement

Conduit of the Tank Stream (section), oviform, brickwork / [earthenware] / mortar / cement / concrete, excavated in 1999 from No 1 Martin Place, Sydney, Australia, built c. 1866

Physical Description

Oviform section of the Tank Stream consisting of two layers of bricks with remnants of original mortar and large sections of added cement. The brickwork rests on a pre-cast [earthenware] open drain, the top of which has collapsed and been filled with concrete. The whole section is internally and externally encased with expanded foam and supported within an iron and timber framework. The framework and foam casing were prepared for excavation and storage and may be replaced.

DIMENSIONS

Height

1650 mm

Width

1345 mm

Depth

1900 mm

PRODUCTION

Notes

In the 1860s the course of the channel of the Tank Stream was made into an uncovered, oviform, masonry sewer. During the erection of the GPO and the formation of Martin Place the section of the sewer at that site was covered in. Various authors put the date of the GPO construction work as 1860s or 1870s. Heritage architect Ian Stapleton dates the enclosing of the drain as 1866 (in litt. 16 June 2000).

HISTORY

Notes

This section of the Tank Stream was excavated from below the GPO (General Post Office) at 1 Martin Place, Sydney. During the adaptive redevelopment of Sydney GPO in 1999-2000 the Tank Stream conduit was removed and replaced where it crossed the building's courtyard. Most of this was a circa 1942 conduit drain but a small section was a brick oviform profile conduit dated from around 1866. Apparently as part of the conditions of redevelopment, this section was salvaged by the project contractors Grocon Pty Ltd in two parts over 2 metres long. A metre-long slice was treated by a traditional stonemason and mounted as part of an interpretive display on the lower ground floor of No.1 Martin Place (i.e. the GPO building). The remaining sections, encased in expanding foam and an iron framework, were stored at Grocon's holding yards at Matraville in Sydney until heritage architect Ian Stapleton suggested that they be taken into the Powerhouse Museum collection. Grocon Pty Ltd subsequently donated these sections to the Powerhouse, delivering one to Castle Hill and one to the Harwood workshop. This section of conduit, or sewer, was removed during the adaptive redevelopment of Sydney GPO in around 1999. The section dates from around 1866 when the Tank Stream (by then an open drain) was enclosed at that site during the building of the GPO.

SOURCE

Credit Line

Gift of Grocon Pty Ltd, 2000

Acquisition Date

15 February 2001

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