Following the death of Lord Norton in 1905, his estate was put up for sale in 1911. Part of the house was rebuilt near Cirencester, but the rest was demolished in 1920. Hams Hall Power Station was constructed by the municipally owned City of Birmingham Electricity Supply Department on the site in 1928. It was opened on 6 November 1929, equipped with two Fraser & Chalmers 30,000 kW turbo-alternators. The generating capacity of the site was progressively increased to 240,000 kW. The station burned approximately 774,000 tonnes of coal a year. At the time it was one of the largest power stations in Europe. The station was also the first power station in the United Kingdom to burn pulverised coal, rather than lumps of coal. It was also used as a prototype site for the installation of gas turbines in coal-fired plants. Water for the station was cooled by six reinforced concretehyperboliccooling towers. At the time, these were the largest cooling towers ever built. The station had two tall chimneys. In 1962 a 15 MW Bristol SiddeleyOlympus aircraft gas turbine was commissioned. It was used to assess the suitability of aircraft gas turbine generators for meeting peak-load and emergency requirements. The installed capacity and electricity output is summarised in the table.
The station's closure was announced in 1975, following a fall in electricity consumption. By the time of its closure its generating capacity had fallen to 151 MW. The station's chimneys and cooling towers were demolished in 1978. A gas-turbine rated at 15 MW associated with the A station was operational in 1980.
Hams Hall B
The second station on the site, Hams Hall B Power Station, was planned in 1937. It began generating electricity in 1942. The station was expanded between 1946 and 1949. In 1947 the B station had the highest thermal efficiency of any plant in the UK. The station had a generating capacity of 160,500 kW. With its completion the two stations formed the greatest concentration of generating plant in Europe. Its water was cooled by four cooling towers. The station used Parsons turbo-alternators. These were supplied with steam from the Stirling and Yarrow boilers which delivered 450.0 kg/s of steam at 44.8 bar and 441°C. In 1980/1 the station sent out just 575 MWh. In December 1945 there was complaint about pollution from the station. This was caused by a corroded metal connection between the boilers and the chimneys. The pollution continued until 1948, when the connection was eventually replaced. The combined Hams Hall "A" and "B" stations were nationalised on 1 April 1948 under the terms of the Electricity Act, 1947. The installed capacity and electricity output is summarised in the table.
Year
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1961
1962
1963
1971
1979
1981
Installed capacity, MW
300
300
300
300
300
348
348
348
330
330
330
Electricity output, GWh
1,519
1,615
1,692
1,510
1,305
1241.5
1287
1175
835
431
0.6
The station closed on 26 October 1981 after 39 years of operation. It had a generating capacity of 306 MW at the time of its closure. Its four cooling towers were demolished in November 1985, with chimney number 2 going down in September 1988.
The third, final station to be constructed on the site was Hams Hall C Power Station, built in the 1950s and commissioned between 1956 and 1958. The station's water was cooled by three high natural draft cooling towers. It generated 357 MW of electricity using six generating sets each of 65 MW. The turbo-alternators were supplied with steam from the boilers which produced 788 kg/s of steam at 241.3/158.6 bar and 593/566°C. In 1980/1 the station sent out 3,439.623 GWh, the thermal efficiency was 29.60 per cent. In 1968, the station was under consideration to be converted to fuelled by natural gas, after a successful experimental trial of the fuel in one of the station's boilers earlier in the year. In October 1968 permission for the conversion was refused due to difficulties in the coal industry. Despite this, talk of conversion started again in 1970, and following discussion with the National Coal Board and the National Union of Mineworkers, permission was granted for the station to co-fire coal and natural gas. The installed capacity and electricity output is summarised in the table.
Year
1957
1958
1961
1962
1963
1971
1979
1981
1982
Installed capacity, MW
112
280
390
390
390
390
390
390
390
Electricity output, GWh
223
1,334
2,344
2,334
2,255
2,592
1,392
366
793
Following privatisation in 1990, the station was operated byPowergen. The C station closed in 1992. Its two chimneys and three cooling towers were demolished on 15 December 1993, under darkness.
Proposed D station
In 1968 the site was considered for a fourth power station. The CEGB made routine investigations into the feasibility of a D station, but nothing was ever built.