Many people have no idea that a £4.5 billion tunnel the width of three London buses runs across the capital city - and plays ...
S even years ago, the world was both horrified and enthralled by the announcement of a giant “fatberg” in the London sewers composed of human waste, cooking fat, sanitary products and items ...
This gigantic fatberg, made up of oil, grease, wet wipes, and nappies, was found blocking London's sewer systems. The huge blob weighed 130 tonnes - roughly the same weight as 11 double decker buses.
Ever wondered about the gory and grimy details of history? 3 words: London’s sewers system; the exact system that is used by 9 million people quotidianly and in no understatement, is the ...
Wastewater samples taken from North and East London between February and May suggest ... Viral shedding explains why polio might be in the sewers While wild polio has been near-eradicated around ...
Investors in privatised British utilities should not benefit from taxpayer bailouts, the outgoing chairman of the London ...
The Chancellor's plans to build a third runway at Heathrow could turn great swathes of the English countryside into "noise ...
A subterranean garden has sprung up in what will soon be London's super sewer. Some 50m below the ground, the installation has been dubbed Loo Gardens. It is described as an immersive experience ...
An Underground Guide to Sewers or: Down, Through and Out in Paris, London, New York, &c. takes readers through the evolution of waste management, from ancient eras to the major turning point in the ...