本帖最后由 choi 于 10-1-2014 18:40 编辑
(5) Gebhard Weiss and Hansjörg Brombach, section 8.1 Today’s practice in stormwater management in Germany - Statistics. Novatech, 2007
documents.irevues.inist.fr/bitstream/handle/2042/25163/1557_063weiss.pdf?sequence=1
Quote:
"The first sewer networks in Germany were built in the late 19th century. William Lindley and William Phillips Dunbar were two famous British engineers who designed the first combined sewer systems eg in Frankfurt and Hamburg. After the first mechanical sewage treatment plants came up, also separate drainage systems were built. The latter were preferred mainly in the North and the East of Germany, while the South is mainly governed by the combined system. Fig. 1 shows the up-to-date distribution. * * * Moreover, the cities of Berlin, Hamburg and Bremen resemble islands [mixed combined AND separate systems, while the surrounding regions uses mostly separate sewer system].
My comment:
(a) Praising its sewer works in Tsingtao/Qingdao, Chinese admire Germans more than Taiwanese. But Germany’s first two sewer systems were designed by Englishmen (the Lindley father and sons; but not Dunbar, see (b)). Moreover, US says German sewer systems are crumbling due to old age.
Robert S Amick and Edward Burgess, Project Summary: Exfiltration in Sewer System. US Environmental Protection Agency, December 2000 (EPA/600/R-01/034)
nepis.epa.gov/Adobe/PDF/P100E5PY.pdf
(“The study of exfiltration has been of great interest in Germany. The country has a very old, deteriorated [sewer] infrastructure. The cost to complete the necessary repairs to Germany's sewer systems is estiated to be near $100 billion (US). Therefore, several exfiltration studies have been conducted to prioritize repair work")
(b) William P Dunbar
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_P._Dunbar
(William Philipps Dunbar; 1863 - 1922; an American physician)
In other words, Wikipedia makes a serious mistake.
(c)
(i) William Lindley
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Lindley
(1808-1900; an English engineer who together with his sons designed water and sewerage systems for over 30 cities across Europe; a catastrophic fire in May 1842 left a third of the town [Hamburg] in ruins; Within three years 11 km of sewers had been built in Hamburg)
(ii) Municipal Engineering on the Continent; A presidential address. Nov 25, 1904. In: The Surveyor and municipal and county engineer. vol 26, July 1 to Dec 30, 1904. London: The St Bride's Press, Ltd.
books.google.com/books?id=vpZVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA626&lpg=PA626&dq=William+Lindley+sewer&source=bl&ots=eWEOx1fuLs&sig=u1zWx1eWiUgN78aaHNMobvUquGI&hl=en&sa=X&ei=5qcsVO_lE8a9ggT4x4IY&ved=0CEAQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&q=William%20Lindley%20sewer&f=false
(summary of a speech delivered by WH Lindley, a son of William Lindley: “Mr Lindley [the son] proceeded to explain how the first works for supply as well as the first sewerage works were those of the city of Hamburg. These were designed and carried out by his father, William Lindley, after the great fire in 1842, under the influence of English works of a similar nature. * * * He [son] described the system of flat-graded sewers of elliptical section")
(iii) William Heerlein Lindley
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Heerlein_Lindley
(1853-1917)
(d) Why Berlin has a mixed sewer system? See next posting.
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