After fifteen years I re-visited a pumping station
near some of the deepest regions (located several meters below mean sea level)
of the Netherlands, which houses one of the world’s oldest museums dedicated to
hydraulic engineering: the Cruquius. The pumping station contributed to
draining the former Haarlemmermeer (‘meer’ meaning ‘lake’) between 1849 and
1852. After serving as a backup station it was formally taken out of service in
1932 and turned into a museum two years later. It now displays several
hydraulic pumps used in other projects, but most attention goes to the eight enormous
lift pumps and the central cylinder engine, which can still move - on
electricity, and no longer pump water.
The museum, which is housed in the pumping station’s
workshops, sends out message rests on emphasizing a continuous battle between
the Dutch and their ‘water wolf’. For example, it depicts a heroic Dutch lion
in the shape of the landscape of west Holland after the reclaiming the lake. The
names of the three pumping stations are after three hydraulic engineers who
brought forward plans for reclaiming the Haarlemmermeer: Jan Adriaanszoon
Leeghwater (plans dating back to the mid-17th century), Nicolaas
Kruik (Latinised name Cruquius, early 18th century), Frans van
Lynden van Hemmen (early 19th century) which also indicates a form
of ‘heroism’.
Before the pumping stations were constructed, water
management in polders and reclamation of small wetlands was mostly done by
using wind mills, (Archimedes’) screw pumps and water wheels, but in the late
18th century, steam driven engines step by step became employed in
hydraulic engineering works. The construction of three large pumping stations to
drain the Haarlemmermeer represented a solid establishment of using steam power
for land reclamation.
The Haarlemmermeer measured around 17,000 hectares,
which more than out-doubled the largest drainage project done so far by means
of wind mills (Beemster polder of around 7,000 hectares). Over the centuries
the lake had expanded gradually (eroding its shores, breaking connections to
nearby other lakes, as well as deepening up to 4 meters due to underwater peat
extraction). Although plans for draining the lake existed earlier, it necessitated
socio-political reasons, as well as the advent of hard wind and steam power
engines, to materialize. According to the museum, William the First (the first
king of the Netherlands) needed to improve his public image after Belgium
declared its independence from Holland in 1830. Also major storms in the 1830s,
extending the lake further, threatening the urbanizing cities along its edges. Reclaiming
the Haarlemmermeer could from this perspective be seen as a nation (re-)building
effort, attempted with steam engines in pumping stations displaying grandeur and
technological achievement.
Because besides its hydraulic background, a striking
feature of the pumping station is its architecture. When looking at the
station’s pictures, but even more when visiting its interior, it is hard not to
associate the structure to designs of churches or castles. Its buttresses,
lancet-shaped windows, battlements and keep support an authoritative
affirmation by the church and state power with the practice of ‘pumping out
water’. Therefore, well worth to pay it a visit and to learn more about this
feature of water management in the Dutch delta.
Photo Gallery by QuickGallery.com
Photo Gallery by QuickGallery.com
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