Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: water tower

Cologne - Wasserturm

02 Jun 2020 178
Cologne is the fourth-largest city in Germany - and one of the oldest. A Germanic tribe, the Ubii, had a settlement here, this was named by the Romans "Oppidum Ubiorum". In 50 AD, the Romans founded "Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium", the city then became the provincial capital of "Germania Inferior". -- The increasing population of Cologne during the 19th century required an improved drinking water supply. In 1864 London engineer John Moore was awarded the contract to design a water tower, which could supply 170,000 residents. However, the actual construction started in 1868 was smaller. The cylindrical water tower is 35.6 meters high with a diameter of 34 meters. It could held 3,650 m³ of water and was, completed in 1872, the largest water tower in Europe. The water tower was used until about 1930. It was damaged during the WWII and for years the former water tower remained a ruin. In 1985 investors took over, planning a for a cost of 20 million DM the conversion of the water tower into a luxury hotel. The unusual hotel was completed in 1990.

Cologne - Wasserturm

08 Mar 2019 198
Cologne is the fourth-largest city in Germany - and one of the oldest. A Germanic tribe, the Ubii, had a settlement here, this was named by the Romans "Oppidum Ubiorum". In 50 AD, the Romans founded "Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium", the city then became the provincial capital of "Germania Inferior". With the fast growing population in the second half of the 19th century, the water supply became a problem. The English engineer John Moore did a design for a tower with a capacity of about 14.000m³. The water tower that got actually built in 1868 was much smaller. It had a capacity 3.600m³. Severely damaged during WWII the water tower was a ruin upto 1986, when the rebuilding started. In 1990 a posh hotel (*****) opened here. www.hotel-im-wasserturm.de/en/hotel-design/