Guide for Practitioners 5 Scottish Iron Structures

Page 1

TECHNICAL CONSERVATION, RESEARCH AND EDUCATION

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

SCOTLAND TECHNICAL~ C NOTES E Preparation and Use of Lime Mortars (revised 2003) Conservation of Plasterwork (revised 2002) Performance Standards for Timber Sash and Case Windows (1994)(Deleted) Thatch & Thatching Techniques (1996) The Hebridean Blackhouse (1996) Earth Structures and Construction in Scotland (1996) Access to the Built Heritage (1996) Historic Scotland Guide to International Conservation Charters (1997) Stonecleaning of Granite Buildings (1997) Biological Growths on Sandstone Buildings (1997) Fire Protection Measures in Scottish Historic Buildings (1997) Quarries of Scotland (1997) The Archaeology of Scottish Thatch (1998) The Installation of Sprinkler Systems in Historic Buildings (1998) External Lime Coatings on Traditional Buildings (2001) Burrowing Animals and Archaeology (1999) Bracken and Archaeology (1999) The Treatment of Graffiti on Historic Surfaces (1999) Scottish Aggregates for Building Conservation (1999) Corrosion in Masonry Clad Early 20th Century Steel Framed Buildings (2000) Scottish Slate Quarries (2000) Fire Risk Management in Heritage Buildings (2001) Non-Destructive Investigation of Standing Structures (2001) The Environmental Control of Dry Rot (2002) Maintenance and Repair of Cleaned Stone Buildings (2003) Care and Conservation of 17th Century Plastenvork in Scotland (2004) Development and Archaeology in Historic Towns and Cities (2004) Fire Safety Management in Heritage Buildings (2005) Corrugated Iron and other Ferrous Cladding (2005) Scottish Turf Construction (2006)

FOR PRACTITIONERS GUIDES Stonecleaning -A Guide for Practitioners (1994) Timber Decay in Buildings - The Conservation Approach to Treatment (1999) 1 Rural Buildings of the Lothians: Conservation and Conversion (1999) 2 Conservation of Historic Graveyards (2001) 3 Conservation of Timber Sash and Case Windows (2002) 4 Measured Survey and Building Recording (2003)

Available from: Historic Scotland Technical Conservation, Research and Education Group Historic Scotland Conservation Bureau Longmore House Salisbury Place EDINBURGH EH9 1SH Tel 0131 668 8638 Fax 013 1 668 8669 email hs.conservation.bureau@scotland.gov.uk



Author Tom Swailes Lecturer in Structural Engineering School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering University of Manchester PO Box 88 Sackville Street Manchester M60 1QD e-mail: thomas.swailes@manchester.ac.uk

Acknowledgements Historic Scotland and the author are grateful for help provided by the following individuals and organisations during the preparation of this practitioners' guide. * Indicates individuals who read and made comments and suggestions on a first draft of the publication. Paul Bedford, Adams Consulting Engineers and Morrison Construction (former rail store, Gidea Park, Essex) Paul Mitchell, Angus Council (Balintore House) Arch Henderson & Partners (Transit Shed, City Quay, Dundee) Brian Edie, Arup (The GPO Buildings, Edinburgh) *Stuart Nisbet, Jim Winning (St. Vincent Street Church, Holmwood House) and *John Roberts, Babtie Group *Ian Ballantine and Roddy Crichton, Ballantine Bo'ness Iron Company Ltd Brown Construction (South Mills, Dundee) Gavin Jack, Buro Happold (Anchor Mills) *Michael Bussell, Building and Structural Engineering Consultant Cala Homes (Grandholm Works) CAN. Civil and Structural Engineering Services and their client Mott Macdonald (Queen Street Station, Glasgow) Mike Broadhurst, CAPCIS Ltd *Martin Fallon, Cast Metal Developments Ltd Andrew Laing, Charles Laing Iron and Brass Foundry James Young, Clyde Port Authority (James Watt Dock, Greenock) *Geoff Wallis, Dorothea Restorations Ltd Ken Laing, Dundee City Council (Morgan Academy) Julie Nichol, East Renfrewshire Planning Department (Crofthead Mill) Peter Elliott, Elliott and Company, Consulting engineers (for information on a plain concrete floor in Edinburgh) *Jonathan Clarke, English Heritage Carol Whittaker, Falkirk Museums Callum Ford, Forth Properties Ltd (City Quay, Victoria Dock, Dundee) David Gibson, Gibson Dennis Associates (Gardner's Store, Jamaica Street) Dr David Grant (United College, University of St Andrews) Garvald Bakery (The Engine Shed) Dr Adrian Bell, UMIST (for information on ice damage to hollow columns) Prof. Michael Burdekin, UMIST (for information on welding and fracture toughness of wrought iron) Joe Marsh, UMIST (Heaton Hall, Butterworth Hall Mill, Sefton Park Palm House) Tom Brown, Brian Heffron and Colin Meek, Glasgow City Council (The Kibblc Palace) *David Mitchell, Heritage Engineering, The Industrial Heritage CO, Ltd Rev. Dr Richard Hills (information on James Watt) David Henrie, Chris McGregor, Neil Ross, Malcolm Watters and *Lothian Webster, Historic Scotland *John Hume, formerly Historic Scotland *Lawrance Hurst, Consultant, Hurst Peirce & Malcolm Mike Chrimes and Carol Morgan, Institution of Civil Engineers, Library and Archives

*Prof. Roland Paxton, Institution of Civil Engineers Panel for Historical Engineering Works and Heriot-Watt University George Ters, International Knitwear Ltd (Dangerfield Mill, Hawick) Paul Belford, Ironbridge Archaeology Mr and Mrs Scott (Kingsknowe Hotel Conservatory) Bryan Mawer (for information on sugar refineries) MBG Properties (126-136 Ingram Street, Glasgow) Alastair Jackson (early steel framed buildings) George Johnstone, Midlothian District Council (Fairfield House Conservatory) Milnbank Housing Association (Great Eastern Hotel) The Mitchell Library, Glasgow Drew Murdoch (Crofthead Mill) National Archives of Scotland, Edinburgh Willie Anthony, John Crompton and Jim Tate, National Museums of Scotland (Royal Museum, Museum of Scotland) Jim Arnold and Lorna Davidson, New Lanark Conservation Trust Eddie McGloin and Stuart McPherson, Network Rail (Queen Street Station, Glasgow) Martin Wellwood, Robbie & Wellwood (Chapel Works, Montrose) Tom Day, Robert Gordon University Cath Prentice, RCAHMS *Ted Ruddock Gordon Keir, Morrisons, Marcus Dean and Phoenix Trust (Anchor Mills, Paisley) Nia Morgan and Nigcl Watson, Scottish Border Enterprise (Ettrick Mills) *Jeff Carter, Scottish Building Standards Agency Dick Totten, Scottish Maritime Museum John Bumie and Frank Cauldwell, Scottish Railway Preservation Trust James Wilson, (Skelmorlie Castle conservatory) Dr Ron Fitzgerald, Structural Perspectives Ltd Ian Cargill and Jim Douglas, University of St Andrews (United College, University of St Andrews) *James Sutherland, Consultant, Harris and Sutherland Andrew Smith (for information on Stratfield Saye Iron Bridge) Anne M. A. Swailes (for advice on illustrations) Janet Swailes *Dennis Urquhart (HS Reviewer) Dr. Bruce Walker, Dundee University Professor David Walker Dr. David Walker (for information on Peddie & Kinnear) *Owcn Gorton, The Welding Institute J D Wetherspoon (Gardner's Store, Jamaica Street) John Carswell (Baltic Works, Arbroath) Jim Tildesley, Scottish Maritine Museum


CONTENTS

Page LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FOREWORD 1

INTRODUCTION

vi xxi 1

1.1 Aims

1

1.2 Scope

1

1.3 Iron

2

Page 3.3 Bridges

59

3.3.1 Arch bridges

59

3.3.2 Suspension bridges 3.3.3 Girder bridges

64 66

3.4 Ships

70

4 STRUCTURAL APPRAISAL

71

1.3.1 Pure iron

2

4.1 General principles

71

1.3.2 Wrought iron

2

4.2 Surveys and inspections

71

1.3.3 Cast iron

3

4.3 Structural adequacy

74

1.4 Structural iron - the Scottish tradition

3

4.4 The effects of past structural alterations

75

1.5 General principles and philosophy of conservation

8

4.5 Structural assessment

76

1.6 Using this Practitioners' Guide

2

IRONMAKING

l0

11

4.5.1 General principles

76

4.5.2 Stages in a structural assessment

80

4.5.3 Static load tests

80

4.5.4 Dynamic testing

82

2.1 Introduction

11

2.2 Early iron making

11

2.3 Scottish iron industries

14

5.1 Introduction

83

2.4 The early Scottish steel industry

19

5.2 Wrought iron

83

5 MATERIAL PROPERTIES

83

5.2.1 Metallurgy and texture

83

21

5.2.2 Manufacture

86

3.1 Introduction

21

5.2.3 Mechanical properties

88

3.2 Buildings

21

(a) Tensile and compressive strength

88

3.2.1 Factories and warehouses

21

(b) Toughness

90

3.2.2 Maritime buildings

30

(C)Directional properties

90

3.2.3 Train and goods sheds

33

5.2.4 Temperature and cold-working effects 90

3.2.4 Heavy engineering workshops

41

5.2.5 Forge welding

3.2.5 Public, commercial and residential Buildings

41

5.2.6 Historical test data and materials testing91

3.2.6 Glasshouses and pre-fabricated iron Buildings

50

3

STRUCTURAL USES OF IRON

5.3 Cast iron

91

92

5.3.1 Metallurgy and texture

92

5.3.2 Manufacture

93

5.3.3 Mechanical properties

94


(a) Compressive strength

94

7.3.1 Background

(b) Tensile and bending strength

95

7.3.2 Multi-storey buildings

(c) Deformation and stress/ strain characteristics

96

7.3.3 Roofs

(d) Hardness

96

7.4.1 Arch and beam floors

(e) Toughness

96

7.4.2 Plain slab floors and stairs

5.3.4 Temperature dependency of material properties

98

7.4.3 Reinforced slab floors

5.3.5 Historical test data and materials testing

98

7.4 Floor systems and their structural behaviour

7.4.4 Later patent floor systems 7.5 Fire resistance and fire protection 7.5.1 Cast iron elements

6

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS

99

7.5.2 Wrought iron elements

6.1 Introduction

99

7.5.3 Floor construction materials

6.2 Wrought iron ties

99

(a) Timber joists and boards

6.2.1 Details and manufacture

99

(b) Brickwork and fired clay blocks

6.2.2 Strength and assessment

99

(c) Stone

6.3 Wrought iron beams 6.3.1 Rolled sections - development details and manufacture

101

(d) Concrete

101

7.5.4 Whole building considerations

(a) Glazing bars

101

7.5.5 An historical perspective on 'fireproof' buildings and fire

(b) Rails

101

(c) Deck beams

102

(d) Joists with equal flanges

102

6.3.2 Riveted sections - details and manufacture 102 6.3.3 Strength and assessment 6.4 Cast iron columns and struts

102 103

6.4.1 Details, manufacture and defects

103

6.4.2 Strength and assessment

106

6.5 Cast iron beams 6.5.1 Details, manufacture and defects

109 109

6.5.2 The evolution of different forms of beam 112 6.5.3 Strength and assessment

112

8

CONSERVATION AND REPAIR

8.1 General principles 8.2 Listed Building Consent 8.3 Conservation Areas 8.4 Scheduled Ancient Monument Consent 8.5 Mechanical repair and strengthening 8.6 Surface bonded reinforcement 8.7 Hot repairs 8.7.1 Wrought iron 8.7.2 Cast iron 8.8 Filling and jointing materials 8.9 Replacement of elements or missing pieces

7

BUILDING STRUCTURES

117

8.10 Corrosion and corrosion prevention

7.1 Introduction

117

8.10.1 Corrosion

7.2 Resistance to vertical and lateral loads

117

7.2.1 Roofs and single-storey buildings

117

8.10.2 Original corrosion prevention systems and finishes

7.2.2 Multi-storey buildings

119

8.10.3 Maintenance of existing paintwork

122

8.10.4 Cleaning, surface preparation and paint specifications

7.3 Resistance to disproportionate collapse


9

SOURCES OF INFORMATION AND ADVICE

159

9.1 Introduction

159

9.2 Government and its agencies

159

9.3 Museums and sites

160

9.4 Libraries, archives and information services 163 9.5 Trusts, societies and interest groups

166

9.6 Professional institutions and accreditation bodies

169

9.7 Specialist contractors, service providers and 171 research organisations 9.8 Other internet information resources

173

10 REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING 11 GLOSSARY

189

APPENDIX A GREEN SAND MOULDING 197 AND CASTING REPLACEMENT, CHARLES LAING & SONS LTD, BEAVERBANK FOUNDRY, EDINBURGH APPENDIX B UNITS AND CONVERSION 201 FACTORS STRUCTURES INDEX

202

GENERAL INDEX

204


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Illustration 1

An Iron time line

Illustration 2

Foreground: Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee (1 889)

Illustration 3

Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee

Illustration 4

Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee

Illustration 5

Wrought iron fracture

Illustration 6

Wrought iron microstmcture

Illustration 7

Cast iron fracture

Illustration 8

Cast iron microstmcture

Illustration 9

Part of a cylinder for an early steam engine (1766)

.

Illustration 10

Craigellachie Bridge (1 8 12-15)

Illustration 11

Moulding cast iron letter boxes

Illustration 12

Cast iron railings undergoing refurbishment

Illustration 13

The Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow. Ironwork Detail

Illustration 14

The Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow (1852-4) Interior

Illustration 15

Illustration 16

Illustration 17

Illustration 20 Illustration 21

The gravestone of a blacksmith hammerman Scottish Ironworks

Illustration 22

Location of Scottish Iron Works, Coal and Iron Ore Deposits.

Illustration 23

Bonawe Ironworks Casting house and furnace

Illustration 24

Carron Ironworks

Illustration 25

A Cast iron fire grate.

Illustration 26

Scottish Iron Production.

Illustration 27

Bell Mill (or West Mill), Stanley Mills, Perthshire (1786-7) External view

Illustration 28

Bell Mill (or West Mill), Stanley Mills, Perthshire (1786-7) Cast iron storey posts with timber beams continuous over

Illustration 29

Green's Mill, Arbroath (1837)

Illustration 30

New Lanark Schoolroom (1817)

Illustration 3 1

New Lanark Schoolroom (1817). Cast iron column with a quatrefoil cross-section

Illustration 32

South Mills Dundee (c. date of this building 1864).

Illustration 33

Crofthead Works, Neilston: West Mill (1858)

Illustration 34

Banner Mill, Aberdeen

Illustration 35

New Lanark: East End of Mill 3 (c. 1826) Cast iron supports to stone stairs and landing.

Illustration 36

New Lanark: East end of Mill 3 (c. 1826). Iron framing exposed in the access ramps area

St. Vincent Street Church, Glasgow (1857-9) St. Vincent Street Church, Glasgow

The first Tay Railway Bridge (1879)

Illustration 18

The first Tay Railway Bridge (1879)

Illustration 19

Edinburgh & Leith Post Office Directory Advertisement


Illustration 37

New Lanark: East end of Mill 3 (C. 1826) The iron-framed attic

Illustration 56

Seafield Works, Dundee: West Factory (1859) Internal view

Illustration 38

Grandholm Works, Aberdeen: Old Spinning Mill (1793-4, modified 1820s)

Illustration 57

Seafield Works, Dundee: West Factory (1859) Iron framing components from the weaving sheds

Illustration 39

Mid-W~ndWorks, Dundee (1894 and 1903)

Illustration 58

7 Commercial Street, Dundee (early 1860s) Iron roof trusses

Illustration 40

Robertson's (later Watson's) Bond, Seagate, Dundee (1897, rebuilt after a fire in 1907).

Illustration 59

Seafield Works, Dundee: Boiler House (1 861). Ironwork details

Illustration 60 Illustration 41

Ettrick Mills, Selkirk (1835 and 1850)

Seafield Works, Dundee: Boiler House (1861)

Illustration 42

Ettrick Mills, Selkirk (1835 and 1850) Cast iron column/timber floor beam details

Illustration 61

Iron Roofs (1860s)

Illustration 62

Baltic Works, Arbroath (1861) External view

Ettrick Mills, Selkirk 1835 framing, with later steelwork strengthening

Illustration 63

Baltic Works, Arbroath (1861) Tie bar mid-span connection

Illustration 43

Illustration 44

Ettrick Mills, Selkirk 1835 framing

Illustration 45

Ardbeg Distillery, Islay (after 1815): making-floor

Illustration 46

The collapse of Radcliffe's Mill, Oldham, England from 'The Manchester Times', October 1844.

Illustration 47

Illustration 65

Iron Beacon on Halliman Scars, near Covesea Skerries (1844)

Illustration 66

The Edinburgh and Dalkeith ('Innocent') Railway Goods Shed and Terminus (c. 1840) External view

Illustration 67

The Edinburgh and Dalkeith ('Innocent') Railway Goods Shed and Terminus (c. 1840). Internal view

Illustration 68

The 'Edinburgh and Dalkeith ('Innocent') Railway Goods Shed and Terminus (c. 1840) Steel beams on cast iron columns, over the cafe at first floor level

Illustration 69

A wrought iron roof by Fox, Henderson & Co. (early 1840s)

Illustration 70

Great Eastern Hotel, Glasgow, formerly R. F. and J. Alexander's Cotton Spinning Mill (1848).

Illustration 71

Haymarket Station Edinburgh (1840).

Design for a sugar refinery building (c. 1864).

Illustration 48

Bonnington Sugar Refinery, Leith (1865-6). External view

Illustration 49

Bonnington Sugar Refinery, Leith (1865-6) Interior view

Illustration 50

Bonnington Sugar Refinery, Leith (1865-6) Structural details

Illustration 5 1

Illustration 64 Baltic Works, Arbroath (1861) Wrought iron roof details

Anchor Mills, Paisley: Domestic Finishing Mill (1889)

Illustration 52

North Mill, Belper: roof details (1803-4)

Illustration 53

Cox's High Mill, Camperdown Works, Dundee (1857)

Illustration 54

Douglas Mill, Dundee (1835, rebuilt fire-proof c. 1850)

Illustration 72

Haymarket Station Edinburgh (l840), Trainshed roof ironwork details

Illustration 55

South Mills, Dundee: New Mill (185 1-7, extended 1864 and 1874)

Illustration 73

Glasgow transit shed

vii


Illustration 74

St Enoch Railway Station Roof, Glasgow (1877, now demolished)

Illustration 95

McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (c. 1877) Ironwork details

Illustration 75

Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880)

Illustration 96

Fairfield House conservatory, Dalkeith (c. 1835)

Illustration 76

Queen Street Station roof makers plate

Illustration 97

Fairfield House conservatory, Dalkeith (c.1835)

Illustration 77

Aberdeen Station structural ironwork details to the old roof (1866-70)

Illustration 98

Palm House, Edinburgh (c. 1858). External view

Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880)

Illustration 99

Palm House, Edinburgh (c. 1858). Ironwork details

Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880)

Illustration 100

Palm House, Edinburgh (c. 1858). Ironwork details

Glasgow Exhibition Building, The Machinery Hall, 1888

Illustration 101

Tollcross House Conservatory, Tollcross Park, Glasgow (1858)

Heaton Hall, Lancashire (1776) Staircase landing support beam Plan and details

Illustration 102

Tollcross Winter Gardens, Tollcross Park, Glasgow (1 858)

Illustration 82

Heaton Hall, Lancashire (1776) Staircase landing support beam

Illustration 103

Springbum Park Winter Gardens (1899)

Illustration 83

Royal Crescent, Glasgow (c.1839)

Illustration 104

Springbum Park Winter Gardens (1899)

Illustration 84

Balintore House, Kirriemuir, Angus (1859)

Illustration 105

The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition Building (1857)

Illustration 85

Balintore House, Kirriemuir, Angus (1859). Plan and details of cast iron floor girders

Illustration 106

The Royal Museum of Scotland (1861)

Illustration 107

The Royal Museum of Scotland (1861)

Illustration 108

Gates

Illustration 109

The Grahamston Gate

Illustration 110

The Grahamston Gate

Illustration 78

Illustration 79

Illustration 80

Illustration 8 1

Illustration 86 Illustration 87

Timber framed floor details. Internally trussed timber beams

Illustration 88

Chapel Works, West Mill Montrose (c. 1860)

Illustration 89

United College, St. Andrews University (1 846)

Illustration 'l1

A bandstand the Walter MacFarlane & Co.

Illustration 90

McConnel patent girders.

Illustration 112

Walter MacFarlane & CO's Saracen Foundry

Illustration 91

Iron components in timber roofs Illustration 113

Illustration 92

Edinburgh Royal Infirmary (1874)

Linlathen East Bridge, near Dundee (c. 1804)

Illustration 93

McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (c. 1897)

Illustration 114

Linlathen East Bridge, near Dundee (c.1804)

Illustration 94

McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (c. 1897). Section drawing

Illustration 115

Carron Bridge (1863) General view

viii

of


Illustration 116

Carron Bridge (1 863) Structural ironwork details

Illustration 117

Aqueduct over the River Almond carrying a feeder to the Edinburgh & Glasgow Union Canal (18 18-21) General View

Illustration 118

Aqueduct over the River Almond carrying a feeder to the Edinburgh & Glasgow Union Canal (1 818-21) Detail

Illustration 136

Langside Hill Church, Glasgow (1896)

Illustration 137

Gourock Rope Works (1866)

Illustration 138

Larchfield Works, Dundee (1865) High level inspection of fire damage

Illustration 139

Larchfield Works, Dundee (1865) The interior, destroyed by fire

Illustration 140

Larchfield Works, Dundee (1865) Debris after a destructive fire

Illustration 119

Suspension Bridge by John Stephenson Brown (1817)

Illustration 141

Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880)

Illustration 120

Redpath, Brown & Co., Iron Merchants

Illustration 142

Clarence Mill, Bollington, England (1854)

Illustration 121

St Devenick Bridge, Aberdeenshire (1837)

Illustration 143

The Kibble Palace, Glasgow Botanic Gardens (1873) side elevation

Illustration 122

St. Andrew's Bridge, Glasgow (1856)

Illustration 144

The Kibble Palace, Glasgow Botanic Gardens (1873)

Illustration 123

Bridge of Oich, Abercalder, Invemesshire (1 854) Prior to conservation

Illustration 145

Dangerfield Mill, Hawick (1874)

Illustration 146

Anchor Mills, Paisley: Domestic Finishing Mill (1889)

Illustration 147

(a) and (b) Bell Mill (or West Mill), Stanley Mills, Perthshire (1786-7)

Illustration 148

Warehouse, James Watt ~ o c kGreenock , (1885) (a) General view (b) Detail of elevation to dock

Illustration 149

Warehouse, James Watt Dock, Greenock (1885)

Illustration 150

Alterations to a Manchester cotton mill.

Illustration 151

The Old Spinning Mill, Grandholm Works, Aberdeen (c. 1790, modified 1820s and c. 1900)

Illustration 152

The Old Spinning Mill, Grandholm Works, ~ b e r d e e n(c. 1790, modified 1820s and c. 1900) Interior view

Illustration 153

The Old Spinning Mill, Grandholm Works, Aberdeen (c. 1790, modified 1820s and c. 1900) Details of cast ironframed fireproof construction

Illustration 154

Seafield works, Dundee (1861)

Illustration 155

Dean Clough Mills, Halifax, England: F Mill (1858)

Illustration 124

Bridge of Oich, Abercalder, Invernesshire (1 854)

Illustration 125

Kings Bridge, Glasgow (1822)

Illustration 126

Roxburgh Viaduct Foot bridge (1850)

Illustration 127

Edinburgh & Dalkeith Railway, Braid Bum Bridge (1831)

Illustration 128

Great North of Scotland Railway, Girder Bridge at Inverythan (1857)

Illustration 129

Findhom Viaduct (1858)

Illustration 130

Polloc & Govan Railway, Cannunnock Road Bridge (c. 1841)

Illustration 131

Balmoral Bridge (1857)

Illustration 132

Dalguise Viaduct (1863)

Illustration 133

Bilston Glen Viaduct (1872, 1892)

Illustration 134

The Carrick (1864). Braced hull and knee braced deck beams

Illustration 135

Park Bridge, Aberdeenshire (1854)


Illustration 156

Ashton-under-Lyne Library

Illustration 171

Hardness and tensile strength variation across a large cast iron I - section

Illustration 157

Tensile and Bend Test Data for Nineteenth Century Structural Iron

Illustration 172

Tensile test specimen

Illustration 158

Wrought iron axle fractures

Illustration 173

Menai Suspension Bridge (1826):

Illustration 159

The Ironworks at Blist's Hill, Ironbridge

Illustration 174

Union Bridge, near Berwick (1820) General view

Illustration 160

Wrought iron samples at Blist's Hill, Ironbridge a. Piled bars b. Shingled pile c. Shingled again d. Rough rolled bar

Illustration 175

Union Bridge, near Berwick (1820) Chain details

Illustration 176

Rolls for fish-bellied wrought iron rails

Illustration 177

Edinburgh Post Office (1859)

Illustration 178

Cast iron column top with a vertical bolting face and a seating projection for a bracket

Illustration 179

Cast iron column top (other side) with horizontal bearing table

Illustration 180

Cast iron column cross-sections, showing defects: core eccentricity, voids and porosity

Illustration 181

Cast iron column cross-sections, showing defects

Illustration 182

The Grassmarket, Edinburgh (1875)

Illustration 183

Glasgow Green (probably c.1850)

Illustration 184

Ingram Street, Glasgow (c.1854)

Illustration 161

Iron ready for working under the steam hammer

Illustration 162

Passing a heated iron bar through the rolls

Illustration 163

James Nasmyth's original sketch for the steam hammer

Illustration 164

Nicking and cold bend tests for wrought iron

Illustration 164a

A bar is nicked and then bent

Illustration 164b

Admiralty tests for wrought iron plate

Illustration 164c

A bar specimen is punched

Illustration 165

A variant on the Ram's Horn Test for wrought iron on display in the Royal Museum, Edinburgh

Illustration 166

James Nasmyth's wrought iron bar tests Illustration 185

Ingram Street, Glasgow (c. 1854)

Illustration 167

A summary of strength data obtained by David Kirkaldy

Illustration 186

Former Rail Store, Gidea Park, Essex

Compression tests by Eaton Hodgkinson

Illustration 187

(a) The force on the test specimen was applied using weights, the effect of which was amplified by means of a lever. (b) Specimens after testing.

Dockyard Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Dundee (1874)

Illustration 188

Domestic Finishing Mill, Anchor Mills, Paisley (1889)

Illustration 189

Eaton Hodgkinson's tests on cast iron pillars [Test arrangement]

Illustration 190

Eaton Hodgkinson's tests on cast iron pillars. Fractures of hollow pillars

Illustration 168

Illustration 169

Typical Stress-Strain characteristics of cast iron

Illustration 170

Modem grades of grey (flake graphite) Cast Iron: Tensile and bending strength


Illustration 191

Experimental and theoretical strut buckling curves

Illustration 208

Dockyard Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Dundee (1874)

Illustration 192

Typical section property variations for a test column from Stanley Mills

Illustration 209

Illustration 193

Test results for Column 1

Linthouse Marine Engine Works, Scottish Maritime Museum, Irvine (1872) Internal view in 1950, prior to relocation

Illustration 194 convex

Details of artificial defects in the face of Column 1

Illustration 210

Linthouse Marine Engine Works, Scottish Maritime Museum, Irvine (1872) Cast iron stanchion detail

Illustration 195

Test results for Column 2

Illustration 21 1

Illustration 196

Historic cast iron column design curves

Skelmorlie Castle, Largs: garden conservatory (c. 1860) External view (front)

Ill~~tration 197

Large I-section C O ~ U from ~ ~ Sa C. 1855 Engineering Workshop at Chatham Dockyard

Illustration 212

Skelmorlie Castle, Largs: garden conservatory (c. 1860). External view: fine cast iron detailing of the rounded ends

Illustration 198

Havelock Cotton Mill, Manchester (c. 1845)

Illustration 213

Skelmorlie Castle, Largs: garden conservatory (c. 1860) The ridge is supported at each end by a cast iron column

Illustration 214

Fairfield House conservatory, Dalkeith (C.1835) General view, prior to restoration

Illustration 215

Fairfield House conservatory, Dalkeith (c.1835) Ironwork detail, prior to restoration

Illustration 216

Fairfield House conservatory, Dalkeith (c.1835) After restoration

Illustration 217

Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (1868): Conservatory Link passage to the hotel

Illustration 218

Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (1868): Conservatory Ironwork details

Illustration 219

Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (1868): Conservatory External view

Illustration 220

Kingsknowe ~ o t e lGalashiels , (1868): Conservatory Internal view of the dome

Illustration 221

The Kibble Palace, The Botanic Gardens, Glasgow (1 873)

Illustration 222

The Kibble Palace, The Botanic Gardens, Glasgow (1873) Cast iron columns, with standard braced support a ring beam beneath the clerestorey

Illustration 199

Havelock Cotton Mill, Manchester (C.1845) Iron framing exposed during demolition in 1995

Illustration 200

Houldsworth's Cotton Mill, Glasgow (c. 1804)

Illustration 201

South Mills, Dundee (c. 1851, date of rebuilding 1864)

Illustration 202

South Mill, Dundee (c. 1851, date of this building 1864) A cast iron column on a large cast iron base, also supporting a ground floor beam

Illustration 203

South Mill, Dundee (c.1851, date of this building 1864) A cast iron beam with a hog-backed profile

Illustration 204

Bridge beam strength data

Illustration 205

Cast iron beam and joist test results with selected fracture details

Haymarket station ~~~i~shed, B~~~~~~ Heritage Area, Falkirk (1840) Cantilever steel columns attached to the frame at eaves level existing cater for higher side wind forces than in Edinburgh Illustration 206

Illustration 207

Haymarket Station Train Shed, Bo'ness Heritage Area, Falkirk (1840) Diagonal bracing to cater for higher longitudinal wind forces


Illustration 223

Tollcross Winter Garden, Tollcross Park, Glasgow (1858)

Illustration 224

Building bracing systems

Illustration 225

A. Gardner & Sons Furniture warehouse, ~~~~i~~ street, ~l~~~~~ (1855)

Illustration 226

Illustration 243

Local bulging at the tops of cast iron columns as the results of high temperatures reached during a particularly severe fire

Illustration 244

Fire fighting at a distance

Illustration 245

Weensland Mill, Hawick (1850) Heavy I-section columns supporting stone masonry arches

Illustration 246

Weensland Mill, Hawick (1850) Heavy I-section columns on the scrap heap, after destruction of the building by fire

Illustration 247

Spalling and (structural?) repair of stone balcony slab, caused by expansion (thermal or corrosion related?) of inset cast iron railings

Firth Street Mill, Huddersfield, England (1865-6) Sections through the

floor Illustration 227

Weensland Mill, Hawick (1850)

Illustration 228

Strengthening solutions for fireproof textile mills

Illustration 229

Iron-framing to fireproof flooring

Illustration 230

Naysmith's patent arch floor (1848)

Illustration 248

Damage to iron railings in Glasgow

Illustration 231

The Great Eastern Hotel (Alexander's Mill), Duke Street, Glasgow (1848) Floor Details

Illustration 249

Beam web loss due to corrosion

Illustration 250

Cold stitch repairs

Illustration 232

Dennett's patent arch floor (1864)

Illustration 251

Illustration 233

Plain concrete slab tests by the Royal Engineers (1874)

Cold stitch repairs A cold stitched repair to a cracked cast iron column

Illustration 252

Cold stitch repairs The stitching process

Illustration 234

Wilkinson's patent reinforced concrete floor, Newcastle (c. 1865)

Illustration 253

Cold repair and reinforcement by plating.

Wilkinson's patent reinforced concrete floor, Newcastle (c.1865)

Illustration 254

Cold repair and reinforcement by plating Old repair to damaged cast iron I-section stanchion

Illustration 255

Cold repair and reinforcement by plating Old repair to damaged cast iron I-section stanchion

Illustration 256

Dockyard Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Dundee (1 874)

Illustration 257

Dockyard Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Dundee (1874)

Illustration 258

Broken railings in Edinburgh

Illustration 259

Gate pier of cast iron with wrought iron

Illustration 235

Illustration 236

Forms of filler joist floor

Illustration 237

Later patent floor systems

Illustration 238

Brittle fracture of cast iron beams as a result of fire and fire fighting

Illustration 239

Morgan Academy, Dundee (1868)

Illustration 240

Morgan Academy, Dundee (1868) Fire

Illustration 241

Morgan Academy, Dundee (1868) Tower after fire

Illustration 242

Stanley Mills Cast iron column bent in fire

flourishes, Thoresby Hall, Newark Illustration 260

xii

Replication of missing cast iron


Illustration 261

fragments using a 'pattern' of vinyl rubber backed with plaster Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1 880)

Illustration 262

Broken cast iron railings

Illustration 263

Welded repairs to wrought iron glazing bar ends

Illustration 264

Forging of wrought iron glazing bars

Illustration 265

Skelmorlie Castle, Largs: garden conservatory (c. 1860)

Illustration 266

Skelmorlie Castle, Largs: garden conservatory (c.1860)

Illustration 267

Kingsknowe Hotel conservatory Decorative cast iron facing panel

Illustration 268

Illustration 269

Kingsknowe Hotel conservatory Damage to cast iron facing panel Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880)

...

Xlll

Illustration 270

Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880)

Illustration 27 1

The People's Palace, Glasgow Green, Glasgow: The Winter Garden (1899)

Illustration 272

The People's Palace, Glasgow Green, Glasgow: The Winter Garden (1899). Temporary containment structure

Illustration 273

The Iron Bridge (copied at half-scale), Blists Hill, Ironbridge, Coalbrookdale

Illustration 274

Callender House, Falkirk Museums

Illustration 275

An iron truss of 44 feet span, from Goldsmith's Hall, City of London (c.1830)

Illustration 276

Edinburgh Post Office (1859)

Illustration 277

Part of a drawing for the University of Glasgow prepared in 1806 by Peter Nicholson


Scottish Events

Year

International Events

First charcoal fired blast furnaces Founding introduced by John Meikle for casting cannon etc

c. 1600 c.1686 1701 1709 1736 1740 1753 1757 1759 1761 1764 1767 1769 1772 1773 1776 1779 1783 1784 1786 1789 1792 1794 1796 1797 1799 1800 1801 1803 1805 1808 1811 1814 1820 1824 1826 1827 1828 1831 c.1835 1837 1839 1840 1844 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1867 1874 1879 c. 1880 c.1884 1885 1887 1889 1889 1890 1892 c. 1895 1902

Sweden the main producer of iron

James Watt, b. Greenock Bonawe Ironworks established Thomas Telford, b. Langholm Carron Company established John Rennie. b. Phantassie, East Lothian Water-powered furnace blowing engine at Carron by Smeaton Iron rails cast at Coalbrookdale laid into the Carron Works Steam engine, James Watt's first patent David Mushet, b. Dalkeith; Robert Stevenson, b. Glasgow. Carron Company granted Royal Charter by George 111 Wilsontown Iron Works started (closed 1842)

Bell Mill, Stanley, Perthshire William Fairbairn, b. Kelso James Beaumont Neilson b. Shettleston

Stevenson proposes a cast iron framed light for the Bell Rock James Braidwood, b. Edinburgh Blackband ironstone discovered by David Mushet Joseph Mitchell, b. Forres Earliest iron-framed mill?: Houldsworth's Mill, Glasgow Broadford Works, Aberdeen: James Nasmyth, b. Edinburgh Cast iron rails; Kilmarnock & Troon Railway Craigellachie Bridge, (Thomas Telford) Union Suspension Bridge, Scottish Borders (Samuel Brown) The Great Fire of Edinburgh Agyle Arcade, Glasgow (John Baird I) Hot-blast patent granted to J.B. Neilson Braid Bum Railway Bridge, cast iron girders Cast iron conservatory, Fairfield House, Dalkeith William Arrol, b. Houston, Renfrewshire Lewis Gordon made Professor at Glasgow

Alexander's thread mill, Duke St. Glasgow Walter MacFarlane & Co.'s Saracen Foundry established The Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow, fully iron-framed W.J.M. Rankine appointed to Chair at Glasgow Gardner's Store completed, Jamaica St, Glasgow Bessemer process trials at William Dixon's works fail Findhorn Railway Viaduct; William Fairbairn tubular girders David Kirkaldy's tests on iron and steel for Robert Napier

Ballindalloch and Carron Bridges over the River Spey Siemens Steel plant built by the Steel Company of Scotland Tay Railway Bridge disaster Train Shed, Glasgow Queen Street Steel beams rolled at David Colville & sons Dalzell Works Basic steel plants established at Glengarnock and Wishaw New Tay Railway Bridge Ferguslie and Anchor Mills, Paisley: steel beams Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee Forth Railway Bridge, in steel Building Regulations in Glasgow cover structural iron Jenner's Building, Edinburgh, riveted angle steel columns The Scotsman Building, Edinburgh: steel-framed

xiv

Neviansk ironworks, Urals, Russia Smelting iron with coke, at Coalbrookdale Steelmaking: Huntsman's crucible casting process

First Boulton & Watt steam engine Iron Bridge, Coalbrookdale Profiled rolls for wrought iron; Henry Cort's patent Puddling process for wrought iron: Henry Cort's patent Charles Gasgoine leaves Carron for Russia The first 'fireproof' mill; Strutt's Derby Cotton Mill Telford's Pont Cyssylte Aqueduct, Llangollen Canal First coke-fired iron works in central Europe: Gliwice The first iron-framed mill; Ditherington, Shrewsbury

Pont des Arts, Paris (demolished 1980)

Bourse-& Halle au Ble domes, Paris (1809-13) St. Georges's Church, Everton, Liverpool First iron columns in USA: Theatre, Philadelphia Telford's Menai Suspension Bridge Collapse of Gray's Cotton Mill, Salford Stockton and Darlington 'Wrought Iron Railway' 'Best form of iron beams', published by Hodgkinson Riveting machine, developed by William Fairbairn Steam hammer, invented by James Nasmyth 'Strength of cast iron pillars' published by Hodgkinson Deck beams, uses patented by Kennedy & Vernon Dee Railway Bridge disaster, Chester The Palm House, Kew (Richard Turner) Royal Commission report on the use of iron in bridges Britannia and Conway wrought iron tubular bridges The Great Exhibition Building, London Oxford Museum Steelmaking: Bessemer process patented First Otis elevator, New York Robert Stephenson and Isambard Kingdom Brunt21 die The Boat Store, Sheerness: fully iron-framed James Braidwood dies in the Tooley Street fire Steel beams used in a Lombard St. building, London Leeds Corn Exchange Steelmaking: Siemens process patented Steelmaking: the Basic process patented Steel beams rolled by Bolckow, Vaughan & Co. Home Insurance Building, Chicago Tour Eiffel and Galerie des Machines. Paris

Wrought iron joists last rolled


FOREWORD

Iron forms the basis of many of Scotland's most important and significant historic structures, from the skeletons of great mills to the fabric of bandstands or the intricate details adding character to our Victorian buildings. Understanding this material is therefore crucial to our efforts to preserve that heritage. This Guide provides a comprehensive overview of the historic uses of iron in a construction context. The Guide begins with the history of iron and its use in Scotland, from the earliest manufacturers to the great producers in their heyday, before detailing how the start of steel production signalled a decline in the use of cast and wrought iron as a building material. It offers a detailed discussion on the structural uses of iron in factories, engineering workshops and residential buildings, and considers the construction of bridges and glasshouses. This helps place iron in its proper context and demonstrates how intrinsic it is to the construction of our diverse built heritage. In so doing, it offers a better understanding of the material and of the significance of its impact. The Guide then considers the engineering properties of both wrought and cast iron, including the metallurgy and performance of the different materials. This is

Nl~istrationI (opposite) An Iron 'lime Line

complemented by a detailed discussion of iron as a structural material, and its use in cast and wrought beams, columns and struts. For each element, factors such as manufacture, strength and assessment are examined, concluding with an examination of the load resistance of different floor structures and their resistance to fire or collapse. Finally, appropriate conservation needs, including repair, strengthening and corrosion prevention, are considered. These sections are vital for gaining a detailed knowledge of the behaviour of buildings that use iron. In turn, they allow us to better appreciate the issues surrounding their effective care, maintenance and conservation. Each section in the Guide complements the other to produce a volume that extends our understanding of a material that is an integral part of Scotland's past. It is anticipated that its publication will greatly assist practitioners in ensuring that structures

Ingval Maxwell OBE Director, Technical Conservation Research and Education Edinburgh March 2006


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Illustration 2 Foreground: Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee (1889) Background: The Tay Railway Bridge (1887) Constructed bv Williatn Arrol & Co., designed by the civil engineers WH.Barlow & Son. The bridge was a replacement for Scotlandk best known structural failure - the high girders over the navigation spans of Sir Thomus Bouchkfirst bridge blew down in a gale on 28th December 1879, as a train crossed, killing all on board. (Picture: D Mitchell)

xvi


l INTRODUCTION

1.1

Aims

1.2

Scope

To provide guidance on good conservation practice for those concerned with iron in Scottish buildings, with emphasis on structural aspects.

The focus of this guide is principally on iron in buildings, but it is hoped that it will also be of interest and useful to bridge engineers.

To give an historical overview of the structural use of iron in Scotland.

Examples of the conservation and repair of decorative or 'architectural' ironwork are included to illustrate techniques that may be applicable to structural iron.

Illustration 3 Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee Detail I (Picture: D Mitchell)

Illustration 4 Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee Detail 2 (Picture: D Mitchell)

Architectural cast iron from the Saracen Foundry of Walter MacFarlane & Co. Dundee City Architect's Department oversaw conservation in 1990, with some replacement castings by Alyth Foundry.


1.3

Iron

1.3.1 Iron

Illustration 6 Wrough tructure. Polished and acid-etched 'ferntic' wruugrti iron, viewed through a metallurgical microscope (Picture:Mike Broadhurst, CAPCIS Ltd)

1.3.2 Wrought iron

Early metal objects were cast in bronze, a relatively soft alloy of copper and tin. 'The Iron Age' in Scotland began around 750BC with the coming of the Celts, who brought with them superior tools and weapons of wrought iron. The new material was strong and hard compared to bronze and could be hammered and ground to give a sharp, durable cutting edge. As iron in almost pure form, wrought iron is a ductile material. It has similar mechanical properties to modern mild steel, which is iron alloyed with around 0.2% carbon. Though less uniform, with a fibrous structure rather like wood, wrought iron has advantages over steel in terms of its workability at the blacksmith's forge and resistance to corrosion (Illustrations 5 and 6).

Illustration 5 Wrought iron fracture A I inch (25.4mrn) square b a notched ~ to one third depth with a hacksaw and then cold bent in a vice to show thefibrous structure of the material (Picture: ;T: Swailes)

Illustration 7 Cast iron fracture. A 11/4 inch (31mrn)tk cast iron plate, part sawn through then broken to show a grey, crystalline fracture (Picture: T. Swailes)

Illustration 8 Cast iron microstructure. A polished and acid-etched cast iron sudace, viewed through a metallurgical microscope. In metallurgical terms, a very uniform pearlitic grey cast iron, with little or no ferrite present, and with a nearcontinuous phosphide eutectic (Picture: Mike Broadhurst, CAPCIS Ltd)


1.3.3 Cast iron If early man had by accident heated iron to melting point, the resultant casting would have been rejected as too brittle for the manufacture of tools and weapons. This relative brittleness is due to a high carbon content, usually around 4%. In 'grey' iron, a significant proportion of the carbon is present in the form of graphite flakes, giving a fresh break a characteristic grey, crystalline appearance (Illustrations 7 and 8). Although not forgeable, and brittle and weak in tension compared to wrought iron, cast iron is very strong in compression, can be cast into intricate shapes, and is very durable. When technological advances enabled cast iron to be produced relatively cheaply and in large quantities, it quickly became a valuable structural material. 1.4

Structural iron - the Scottish tradition

The industrial revolution in Scotland is considered by many to have begun in 1759 with the creation, on an unprecedented scale, of the first integrated coke-fired ironworks at Carron (Illustration 9). Scottish ores were particularly suitable for making fine castings and the Carron Works established a reputation for Scottish decorative cast iron that was to last well into the twentieth century. With Canon a notable exception, the iron industry in Scotland developed much later in Scotland than in England and Wales. The civil engineer Thomas Telford, for example, relied in the early nineteenth century on the expertise of the North Wales foundry of William Hazledine for sound structural castings (Illustration 10). From the early 1830s,

Illustration 9 Part of a cylinderfor an early steam engine (1766) Cylindersfor James Watt were cast at the Carron Works, but they proved unsatisfactory. Early Carron workmanship lacked the necessary precision and it was left to John Wilkinson of Shropshire to pegect the art of casting and boring engine cylinders in the 1770s (Barkel; 1992). (Picture: 'The Story of Carron Company, 1759-1959').

production in Scotland increased enormously and Scottish iron gained a strong foothold in the British market. The keys to this success, besides the natural business acumen of the Scots, were the development of the 'hot-blast' by James Beaumont Neilson of the Clyde Ironworks and the exploitation of the 'blackband' ores of Lanarkshire and Ayrshire. People have long been a significant Scottish export. In the eighteenth century, Carron expertise in cast iron and ironworking was taken to Russia by Charles

Illustration 10 Craigellachie Bridge (1812-15) The ironworkfor Thomas Telford's bridge, now a Scheduled Ancient Monument, was cast by Wlliam Hazledine. TeEford'sfomman. William Stuttle, supervised erection of the structure over the River Spey. The bridge was reconstructed in sreclwork above the arch ribs in 1964 and by-passed eight years late,: Cast iron plaques bearing the legends "CASTAT P U S KYNASTON RUABON DENBEIGHSHIRE" and "1814" have been retained. (Picture: RCAHMS)


Illustrc r 11 Mouldifi in 2000 (Picture: T Swailes)

box

r Ballantine Bo'ness Iron Con,

Gascoigne and to Poland by John Baildon. Much of the fine structural and decorative ironwork of those countries can therefore be said to have Scottish ancestry. In the nineteenth century the not very Russian-sounding Baird Works, near St. Petersburg, established a formidable reputation. Scotland also had close links with France, where William Playfair went to establish mills for rolling wrought iron. Overseas markets were exploited extensively by the later architectural ironworks of Glasgow (e.g. Saracen Foundry), Kirkintilloch (e.g. Sun Foundry) and Falkirk. As far afield as Brazil and Australia much of the architectural ironwork is in fact Scottish and, in Britain, iron 'street furniture', from post boxes to lamp posts was, and still is, very often cast in Scotland (Illustrations l l and 12).

.

In factory buildings, iron first appeared in power transmission systems and machinery. Internal structural framing of cast iron, used in England in 1797, was in 1804 and 1807 being employed in the first 'fireproof' cotton and flax spinning mills in Scotland. More than a century apart and very different in scale, Broadford Works in Aberdeen contains two flax mills, built in 1808 and 1914, that are recognisably similar pre-fabricated kits of cast iron columns and beams. Such building systems appeared elsewhere in Western Europe only in the second half of the nineteenth century and were little used for factories in America, where 'slow-burning' timber construction was preferred. Several early cast iron bridges and building frames were shipped in kit form to Scotland from England and Wales, but within a few decades, there


example, included wrought iron from Middlesbrough (Illustrations 17 and 18). Another factor important later in the nineteenth century was the heavy consumption of home-produced material by the Clyde shipbuilders and heavy engineering industries. From about 1855 to 1890 in commercial and industrial buildings, wrought iron 'boiler-plate girders' and bressummers supporting walls are found, but probably not to the same extent in Scotland as in London, where built up beams and girders were used extensively (Illustration 19).

Illustration 12 Cast iron railings undergoing refurbishment at Ballantine Bo'ness Iron Company Ltd, Links Road, Bo'ness, West Lothian in 2000. Note the dovetail connections (Picture: T Swailes)

was also a considerable traffic in the other direction. The rapid construction in London's Hyde Park of the vast pre-fabricated Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition of 1851 captured the imagination of Scottish ironfounders, and the Old Fruitmarket in Glasgow is an early 'descendant' of that building (Illustrations 13 and 14).

Scottish ores proved unsuitable for making early Bessemer steel, but after using open-hearth mild steel for the construction of the Forth Bridge between 1882 and 1890, William Arrol & Co. erected a large number of steel-framed engineering workshops. Following closely behind developments in England, steel beams on cast iron columns were used in two Paisley cotton mills built in 1886-9 and in many city centre commercial buildings over the following 25 years. In Scotland, as in England, the use of steel in high rise buildings trailed the United States. The steel-framed

Hidden behind the fa~adesand within the floors of Scottish public and commercial buildings, and even in private houses, cast iron is to be found to a surprising extent (Illustrations 15 and 16). In towns and cities throughout Scotland, shop fronts and lintels to upper floors that might elsewhere in Britain or Europe be timber are found to be cast iron. Occasionally the entire fa~adeis of iron. Glasgow in particular has some fine examples with innovative iron frames and floor systems behind, contemporary with iron buildings in New York by Jarnes Bogardus. In 1892, well ahead of London, Glasgow introduced regulations concerned with the strength of iron in buildings. Scotland's distinctive architecture is rightly celebrated, but many Scottish buildings also occupy an important place in the history of the development of modern structural framing systems. This aspect of their character deserves recognition and requires careful conservation. Fine decorative work in wrought iron came to England via French pattern books and craftsmen in the early seventeenth century, but Scotland has very few examples of the art. The raw materials for early wrought iron were often imported from Sweden or Russia. The chemical properties of Scottish ores, in particular their relatively high phosphorous content, made them very suitable for castings, but not very suitable for conversion into good wrought iron. Perhaps partly because of this, Scotland was never selfsufficient in structural wrought iron. The girders of Thomas Bouch's ill-fated Tay Bridge of 1879, for

Illustration 13 The Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow. Ironwork Detail (Picture: M. Watson, Historic Scotland)


Illustration 14 The Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow (1852-4)Interior In February 1852, Robertson & Lister submitted a tender in the surn of ÂŁ4,028-4s-Idfor "co,vering o\,er that part of the Bazaar property to the North of City Hall" (Corporation of Glasgow Minute Book C2.14.3). The main hall and its galleried side aisles are reminiscent of the building erected in London's Hyde Park in 1851for the 'Great E.rhibitiot7'. By the Jurnmer of 1854, Lister and Robertson had not quite completed the work, cold the Corrr~cil/lad understc~nd~bly complained about slow progress. The Glasgow Directory of 1845 lists "Robertson & Lister (s~iccessor~ to Burzkier & MacKenzie), smiths, engineers, millwrights and iron roof constructors, Victoria Works. 79 Mirchell Street". The last e n t y for the firm, in 1856, described them simply as "iron-house builders" (Picture: 7: Sn.ai1e.c)


SCOTTISH IRONSTRUCTUR~S

Illurtrcaion l 5 St. Kncent Street Church, Glasgow (185F9) M d e m tdc8Td drawing e m @ Cast im bemm were used as lintels to internal corbelling k the church tower by the awhifeetAkzxandw 'Greek"Thvltmon. Thomson specl@d cast iron where his contemporaries WO& generally not have &m S@. Far mamp3i3, m m w ~ as f f h w of Thamson's v i f h include des~cripdonsof CM iron lintels over openings of modest span ('Elk & h pArciSertul*gl, Blackie dj; Sons, 1863). Recently, durmg cmemation of Holnntraod House (18.7-B), the last s ; f t bthme ~ v i l l a tlre lintels were found not to be cast i i m as spec13erl,but M e t ; some in poor codition a d m p h h g attention Holm& House is now o p n as a Natiortal Trustfir S C O Wproparty (Picture: J m b dm$t&)


Illusrration 16 St. Vincent Street Church, Glasgow Photograph of cast iron lintels to internal corbelling in the rower (Picture: Jacobs Babtie)

Illustration 18 Thefirst Tay Railway Bridge (1879). A riveted wrought iron girder fragment recovered from the Tay, now in the Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh (Picture: I: Swailes) Illustration 17 The first Tay Railway Bridge (1879). Detail offlange angle, with a rolling mark partially obscured by rivets to the web. Rolling marks are rare on wrought iron, quite common on rolled steel sections. Possibly the mark is of Hopkins, Gilkes & Co., of Middlesbrough, contractors for the first Tay Railway Bridge (Picture: I: Swailes)

and reinforced concrete-framed buildings of the early twentieth century did not totally eclipse cast iron, with characteristic art deco motif cladding panels representing a resurgence in the popularity of the material as late as the 1930s. During the research for this publication, the many buildings visited have provided examples of iron structures before, during, and after conservation. Usually site visits have been short, and supported by limited historical research, leaving scope for more detailed studies by others. It is hoped that the rich and varied applications of iron in structures presented here will stimulate interest in both the buildings themselves and in the archival material that relates to them.

1.5 General principles and philosophy of conservation Engineers sometimes have difficulty in proving the

structural adequacy of iron-framed structures to their satisfaction, or to the satisfaction of other engineers. There have been some notable 'near misses' in the past, the like of which it is hoped that this publication will help to avoid in the future. Of many suspected instances of the unjustified condemnation of iron structures, three historic structures of great importance may be mentioned. In the 1950s, an engineer's report recommended replacement of the Palm House in London's Kew Gardens with a new structure. In the 1970s, demolition of many of the splendid iron-framed warehouses in the Liverpool's Albert Dock was recommended. More recently, engineers recommended the demolition of Carron Bridge over the River Spey and replacement in steel, with only the outer cast iron ribs to be retained in non-structural fagades. Fortunately, good sense and good engineering prevailed, and each of these structures has been saved for present and future generations with minimum intervention - a principle that is central to successful conservation work. Conservation includes all the processes in looking after a place that can help in retaining its cultural


JAMES TOD & SON, Bailbag a& O t n d Saitbs,

EIIGMEEBB AID UGHIIE 9-

AN D WAGGON BUILDERS, =S LEITH WALE,

s m ~--~ m--w--~ c B . = . IMPROVE0 HAMMER.

WUFACTURERS OF

sreAM

JIdmblo Briclgo Qiden, Iron RObfm, W-f Culumn8. Water T & P~mps,Turntablsq Swikheo, and C-inp, Sipalr, and all kin& of Rvlliog Stock md Railway Plant, b., PRICE Ll818, DRAWIN08, AN0 EBTIYITES MAY BE HAD 0W.A

CRABS, SINGLE AND DOUBLE PO\YER, Xqon

nloobe, Qiachle, and sift in^ Xacb, rLwAT8

IN ~ O C L

Illustration 19 Edinburgh & Leith Post Ofice Directory Advertisement, 1868 James Tod & Son (established 1810), Railway and General Smiths, Engineers and Machine Makers, and Waggon Builders, 29 Leith Walk, Edinburgh. Products included 'Rolled Malleable Iron Joists and Girders of various sizes up to 12 in. deep, with Top and Bottom Flanges, 5 in. wide, rolled up to 303. long. Can be produced 18 in. deep ifrequired'


significance. It includes maintenance and may, according to circumstances, include repair and upgrading to suit proposed compatible uses - often it will be a combination of more than one of these. Some key terms referred to here are defined in The Australia ICOMOS Charter for the Conservation of Places of Cultural Significance, known as The Burra Charter, as follows:

Cultlira1 significance Aesthetic, historic, scientific or social value for past, present or future generations.

Maintenance The continuous protective care of the fabric, contents, and setting of a place.

carefully planned maintenance is essential if structures are not to deteriorate to the point where they become unsafe. Even with very severe deterioration, it is rare for an iron structure to be genuinely 'beyond repair' a phrase sometimes used by those who would prefer a clear site for redevelopment to an historic building. The first task in any conservation project should be the preparation of a study of the physical, documentary and any other evidence that sheds light on the past and present condition of the building and on its importance. These findings will inform an assessment of the significance of the site which in turn will determine conservation policy. Preparation of a conservation plan encompasses all these processes (see the leaflet, A Guide to the Preparation of Conservation Plans, Historic Scotland 2000 for additional advice, or Kate Clark, Informed Conservation, English Heritage, 2001).

(to be distinguished from repair).

1.6

Repair

1

Involves restoration (i.e. returning the existing fabric of a place to a known earlier state, e.g. by removing accretions, reassembling existing components etc., without the introduction of new material), or reconstr~tction(i.e. returning a place as nearly as possible to a known state, including the introduction of materials, either new or old, into the fabric). Any repairs should ideally be reversible, preferably using materials that match the originals. The sensible advice from the British Standards Institution (BS 7913: 1998, Guide to the principles of the consentation of historic buildings) in respect of repair and assessment is to follow experience and judgement, on the basis of what has been proved to work. In structural performance terms, subject to certain conditions, on which this Practitioners' Guide gives guidance, there is no reason why an old building that has stood the test of time will not continue to do so, even if proof by calculation is not possible. This publication also addresses some important safety issues applicable to large framed buildings, where the progressive collapse of extensive sections of the building as a result of a single localised structural failure may have to be considered. It must also be recognised that, in common with other building materials, exposed ironwork deteriorates and regular,

Using this Practitioners' Guide

In addition to the Contents section which provides a comprehensive listing of subsection topics within each Chapter, a full Glossary of technical terms is included for reference. Section 9 contains contact information for organisations that may have relevant technical expertise and also includes details of Internet-based sources, such as CANMORE, the searchable database of the National Monuments Record of Scotland made available through the RCAHMS. Summary information for each Scottish building and structure referred to in the main text (or illustrated) is presented in tabular form in the Structures Index. The details given include the type of structure, date, location (OS Grid Reference), and where applicable, National Monuments Register of Scotland Number. The References and Further Reading section includes case studies involving the conservation, refurbishment, and repair of iron structures. A table is provided of old and new units of weights and measures, with conversion factors at Appendix B. Within the main text, where doing so enables sense to be made of the modular and repetitive nature of ironframed construction, dimensions are given in imperial units (feet and inches and fractions of an inch). Likewise, historic load and stress data is generally presented in the original units, together with the modem equivalent values in brackets.

I


IRON MAKING

2.1

Introduction

This section provides an overview of Scottish iron making and iron working industries and the beginnings of bulk steel making. Several authoritative works have dealt in detail with these and related industries in Scotland, and with what remains of them below and above ground (Butt, 1967; Hume, 1974-7, and 1989; Hay, 1986). An invaluable pocket-sized illustrated gazetteer of Scotland's industrial heritage has also been published (McDonald, 1996). The Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute and the rival contemporary periodicals The Engineer and Engineering are useful sources of information on later nineteenth century iron and steel industries.

2.2

Early iron making

Iron in pre-industrial Scotland was an expensive commodity, used sparingly in buildings for fixings in the form of cramps, ties, straps, bars and nails. The simple smelting methods used enabled only small quantities of the early blacksmith's raw material to be made at one time. A wood fire would be lit in a small

furnace a few feet in height and lined with fire-resisting clay, with fragments of iron ore fed in at intervals, together with more fuel. Heat was maintained by using bellows to continuously blow in air at the base of the furnace. After several hours, the furnace would be opened to reveal a spongy lump or 'bloom' of iron and slag at the bottom, weighing little more than a kilogramme. Hard hammering then removed much of the slag and consolidated the iron ready for the smith. Working in wrought iron was important in a number of crafts and the hammermen's guild, active in many seventeenth century Scottish towns, would include wrights, coopers, blacksmiths and masons (Illustration 20). The common iron ores are oxides of iron. Given sufficient heat and the presence of ore and a reducing agent, a chemical reaction takes place, one product of which is iron: iron oxide + carbon (ore)

Iron + carbon monoxide

(charcoal)

As wood bums in air it turns to charcoal, a form of carbon, thus providing both heat and the reducing agent. The early furnaces, or 'bloomeries', did not become hot enough to yield a free-flowing molten iron. In any case, if the furnace became too hot, iron in a fully molten state would absorb carbon and the result on cooling would be a small lump of brittle and unworkable cast iron, contaminated with slag.

Illustration 20 The gravestone of a blacksmith hammerman, showing the tools of his trade Larbert Kirkyard, Stirlingshire (Maic 1988) (Picture: John Donald, Edinburgh)

Iron making on a much larger scale became possible with the introduction of the blast furnace to Britain early in the sixteenth century. An early charcoal-fired blast furnace could produce over a ton of cast iron a day. Most of the early cast iron was converted into wrought iron in a charcoal-fired hearth known as a 'finery'. In the finery, air was blown over the re-heated cast iron, causing the oxygen in the air to combine with the carbon in the iron and reduce it to wrought iron. The wrought iron was then re-heated in the 'chafery', a second charcoal hearth (but without the air blast) to raise it to forging temperature. The buildings housing the finery and the other equipment used in the manufacture of wrought iron were known collectively in the iron trade as 'the forge'.


Ironworks in Scotland Name

Started

Disused by

Goatfield/ Crelackan (charcoal)

1775

1813

Bonawe (charcoal)

1730

1866

Devon Forth

1790

1866

County

Shipping port

OS reference

via Loch Etive

NN 024 006 NN010 310

Clackrnannanshire Fife

Clackmannan Alloa

NS 898 959 NT 039 862

Lochgelly

Fife

Burntisland

NT 080 880

Lumphinnans Balgonie

Burntisland

1802

Fife Fife

Carron

1759-63

Stirlingshire

Grangemouth

Kinniel

Linlithgow

Bo'ness

Almond Gladsmuir

Linlithgow Haddingtonshire Lanarkshire

Bo'ness Cockenzie Glasgow1 Bowling

NT 175 927 NT 302 990 NS 880 823 NS 990 803 NS 962 764 NT 457 733 NS 540 700

1840's 1840's

Renfrewshire Lanarkshire

Glasgow

NS 480 640 NS 590 635

Lanarkshire

Glasgow

NS 725 517

1785-6

Lanarkshire Lanarkshire Lanarkshire

Glasgow Glasgow Glasgow

NS 660 140 NS 805 555 NS 724 637 NS 722 662

1816

Garscube Housel (Househill) Govan Quarter Clyde (became pan of Colville's) Wishaw Monkland

1825-6

Gartsherrie

1828

Lanarkshire

Glasgow

Summerlee

1836

Lanarkshire

Glasgow

NS 728 664

Carnbrae (or Carnbroe)

1840's

Lanarkshire

Glasgow

NS 748 635

Calder (near Calderbank) Castlehill

1805 1840's

Lanarkshire Lanarkshire

Dundyvan

1834

Lanarkshire

Chapel (near Chaplhall)

Lanarkshire

Langloan

Lanarkshire

NS 780 628 Glasgow Glasgow1 Leith

NS 733 645

Coltness

1840's

Lanarkshire

Glasgow Glasgow1 Leith

Hareshaw Shotts (Foundry started 1828)

1802-5

Lanarkshire Lanarkshire

Glasgow1 Leith Glasgow I (Leith?)

Omoa (near Newarthill)

1787

1866

N. Lanarkshire

Wilsontown, or Cleugh

1779-86

1842

S. Lanarkshire

NS 768 628 NS 954 756 NS 725 645 NS 795 565 NS 8 15 605 NS 885 605 NS 795 597 NS 950 550

Nithsdale

Ayrshire

Ardrossad Troon

unconfirmed

Eglinton GlengamocW Kilbirnie Blair

Ayrshire Ayrshire Ayrshire

Ardrossan Ardrossan/ Glasgow Ardrossan

NS 307 423 NS 315 535 NS 300 490

Ayrshire Ayrshire

Ardrossad Troon Ayr

NS 590 210 NS 480 060

Ayrshire Ayrshire

Ardrossad Troon Ardrossad Troon

NS 45 l 369 NS 700 270

Ayrshire Ayrshire

Ardrossad Glasgow

NS 290 425 NS 495 365

1840's

Lugar Dalmellington Ponland Muirkirk

1787

Ardeer/ Kilwinning Galston

1840's

Glenbuck (a ruin in 1860)

1795

Lancefield (forge) Gartness (forge)

1921

1813

Ayrshire

NS 746 298

Lanarkshire

Steel plants c.1905 Steel Company of Scotland

Newton and Glasgow

David Colville & Sons

Dalzell

Parkhead Forge

Glasgow

Lanarkshire

Flemington

Clydebridge

Cambuslang

Illustration 21

Scottish Ironwvorks


Company late 1840s

Company 1861

Devon Iron Co.

G and J Miller

.

Furnaces 1788 1796 1823 1830 1849 1861

1

3

Forth Iron Company

2

3

3

5

7

Lochgelly Iron Company

2

4

Alexander Christie & Co. Carron Co.

Carron Iron Co.

Puddling furnaces and wrought iron production 1839

1 4

4

5

5

William Wilson & Co.

3 4

James Russell & Son.

4 4 3

William Galloway (of Paisley) William Dixon

William Dixon

5

6

7

7

Wm. Dixon, at Glasgow Iron Works, Town-head, 200 tonslwk

Colin Dunloo & Co. (land feud from) James Dunlop

Colin Dunlop & Co.

Monkland lron Co.

Robert Bell Monkland lron & Steel CO

William Baird & Co.

William Baird & Co.

Wilsons & Co. Alison & Co.

Wilsons & Co. Merry & Cunninghame

William Dixon & Co.

William Dixon

Shotts Iron Co.

Shotts Iron Co.

John Wilson

John Wilson trustees

Henry Houldsworth

Robert Addie Coltness Iron Co.

Shotts Iron Co.

Shotts Iron Co.

Robert Stewart William Dixon

Robert Stewart

2 1

3

4

16

16

6 6

8 6

7

3 8

2 9 6 6

2

2 2

4

1 5

2 2

2 2

4

4

9 6 4 3 4 3 3

9

8

William Baird & Co. Willaim Baird & Co. Dalrnellington Iron Co.

Muirkirk Iron Co.

Merry & Cunninghame

Dunlop, Wilson & Co., 300 tonslwk

9

1

hlerry & Cunninghame

Portland Iron Co. William Baird & Co.

8 6

1

William Baird & Co. J. M'Donald

3

2

3

3

5 4 5 5 3 4

Muirkirk Iron Co.. (4 blast furnaces), rolling 40-100 tons1 wk

M'Allum & Co. abandoned. Stmed by English CO. puddling wrought iron from white cast iron, in small quantity puddling wrought iron from white cast iron, in small quantity

30 acid open-hearth furnaces, 1 basic furnace 18 acid open-hearth furnaces

6 acid open-hearth furnaces

8 acid open-hearth furnaces

(continued)


Illustration 22 Location of Scottish Iron Works, Coal and Iron Ore Deposits Based on an 1849 map by Robert Hunt, Keeper of Mining Records at the Mining Report OfJice Museum of Practical Geology (Royal Commission 1849)

The main processes in the making and working of iron have been described and illustrated by W K V Gale (Gale, 1967 and 1981).

2.3 Scottish iron industries Iron making and iron working processes required power, either to provide a mechanically assisted blast of air for a furnace or a finery, or to drive tilt hammers or rolling and slitting mills for working wrought iron. Eighteenth century ironworks were therefore constructed alongside rivers and powered by water wheels. The location of a blast furnace was at first governed also by the requirement for a plentiful supply of wood suitable for conversion to charcoal. The later nineteenth century works did not depend on water for power, or on wood for fuel, and were concentrated within the rich coal and iron ore fields of Lanarkshire, Ayrshire and Fife (IlIustrations 21 and 22). Good detailed notes and bibliographies on early iron working sites in Scotland are contained in the CANMORE database (see Section 9.2). These include Canonbie, Craleckan, Glen Kinglass, Invergarry, Letterewe (possibly established as early as 1598), Red Smiddy and Terrioch. With the iron making districts of England and Wales suffering fuel shortages, the Highlands offered waterpower sites with large tracts of

woodland nearby. Most early works in Scotland were short-lived. An exception was the furnace established in the early 1750s at Bonawe by the Newland Company, of West Cumberland, later Harrison, Ainslie & CO. The works smelted iron-rich haematite ore brought from Furness and supplied iron principally to English markets, so location was determined to a large extent by access to the sea. Bonawe provided a niche market with high quality iron into the second half of the nineteenth century. The remains of the works, now in the care of Historic Scotland, include one of the best-preserved charcoal blast furnaces in Britain (Illustration 23). In 1709 Abraham Darby had achieved a breakthrough in iron making by adapting a small charcoal blast furnace in Coalbrookdale to use coke as the fuel (Raistrick, 1953). Coke was produced by part-burning coal in open heaps to drive off sulphur and other impurities that would contaminate the iron. The first large integrated ironworks in Scotland to both make and work iron were built beside the River Cmon in 1759. The founders were James Watt's patron Dr John Roebuck, with Samuel Garbett and Williarn Cadell. The Carron Company obtained skilled workmen from the Coalbrookdale area and coke-fired blast furnaces were built not very long after the works were established. John Smeaton designed water powered


Illustration 23 Bonawe Ironworks Casting house andfurnace (Picture: Historic Scotland)

blowing engines for the furnaces in the early 1760s (Skempton, 1981). Before production at Carron began, the Carron Company acquired the established iron rolling and slitting mill at Cramond (Cadell, 1973). The Cramond works were sited alongside the tidal stretch of the River Almond in a converted grain mill. Much of the raw material for the mill, wrought 'bar iron', was imported up to the end of the eighteenth century from Russia and Sweden. The bar iron was heated in a furnace, hammered flat, then converted to strips by being passed between a pair of heavy cast iron rolls. The rolls were turned via a 16' diameter water wheel and two further water wheels drove the slitting mills. The slitting mills had rotating disc cutters placed along the rolls to divide the re-heated strip into hoop iron (for casks and wheel tyres) and rod iron (for conversion to nails and spikes). The limitations of water power at the Cramond site was such that output did not reach the parent company's expectations of 20 tons of rod iron per week. The works manager explained heavy consumption of coal by the reheating furnaces: 'the fall of water here is very little, by that we are probably required to heat the iron more than they do in England, as it is long in going through the Rollers and Cutters and consequently must be a great deal colder than when the wheels go with double

velocity'. The working of the water wheels was also disrupted seasonally by winter spates and by summer droughts, and daily at the time of high spring tides. Irregular water supply was a serious problem for other early industries, but the problem was particularly acute for iron making. The objective with a blast furnace was continuous operation, often for long periods, until replacement of the furnace lining became necessary. Around 1767 a Newcomen engine was installed at the Carron Works as part of a 'pumped storage' scheme, pumping water from the tailrace back to a storage pond upstream of the water wheels. The works were probably executed by James Watt in association with the Falkirk engineer Robert MacKell (Hills, 2002). Two years later, Watt took out the first of his steam engine patents, introducing the separate condenser. This is widely regarded as the single most important innovation of the Industrial Revolution. The Watt engine, once perfected, provided a long-term solution to the power problem and acted as a spur to many other iron-consuming industries. Boulton & Watt supplied steam blowing engines to several Scottish ironworks: Clyde in 1800, Calder in 1801, and Omoa and Carron in 1802 (Barker, 1992). Iron was of course used in the making of steam engines, for their boilers, and in the making of most machines that relied upon the steam engine for power.


Illustration 24 Carron Ironworks. Running molt,,. ..,on from the blast furnace to the pig beds (Picture: of Scotland'. Falkirk Museums, 1998)

The Carron blast furnaces were top fed with locally mined iron ore and coke from locally mined coal. Small quantities of local limestone were added too, to act as a flux. Every 6 hours or so, the furnace would be tapped at the base and the iron run into open sand beds to solidify as cast iron or 'pig' iron (Illustration 24).

-

- crucible

In the late eighteenth century, each of four furnaces at Carron was producing 1000 tons of pig iron a year, compared with the 700 tons per year from the Bonawe charcoal blast furnace (Scrivenor, 1854). Around this time, several other ironworks were erected to exploit the rich coal, iron and limestone reserves of Scotland's 'Central Belt' - the region containing the valleys of the


Forth and the Clyde, bordered on one side by the Highlands and on the other by the Southern Uplands. By 1796 there were 17 Scottish furnaces producing in total 19,000 tons of pig iron per year. Among the larger of the early ironworks, Omoa, Devon and Wilsontown were closed in the mid-nineteenth century, while Carron, Shotts and Muirkirk were still in production over 50 years later. Sinclair's 1792 'Statistical Account of Scotland' gives some details of the Carron Works (quoted by Day, 1876);

". ..five blast-furnaces, sixteen air-furnaces, a clay mill for grinding clay and making fire-bricks for the use of the said furnaces, an engine that raises four tons and a half of water at one stroke, and on average draws seven strokes per minute. This engine goes in times of drought, and consumes sixteen tons of coal in twentyfour hours. Besides the coal consumed by the engine there are 120 tons burned every day in the works, and by the inhabitants belonging to them. Besides the air furnace there are three cupola furnaces that go by virtue of the blast-furnaces, by pipes conveyed from the machinery of the blasts; their business is much the same with the air-furnaces. There are also four boring mills for boring guns, pipes, cylinders, &c. One of the boring mills is adapted for turning the guns on the outside; they have likewise smith's forges, for making the largest anchors and anvils, as well as small work of various kinds, besides a forge for making malleable iron and a plating forge, also a forge for stamping iron, the hammer of which with the helve are both of cast metal, and weigh a ton and a half." The making of cast iron armaments had been introduced to Scotland after the blast furnace. In 1686 the Scottish Parliament lent its support to 'the trade of Founding, lately brought into the Kingdom by John Meikle, for casting of balls, cannons, and other such useful instruments.' The making of cannon became a major part of the business at Carron, with 429 naval ships armed with 'Carronades' by 1782. The ironfounding expertise at other Scottish ironworks was similarly applied for military purposes; the Clyde Ironworks, for example, were begun in 1786 and by 1799 had 3 blast furnaces devoted mainly to making cannon and other artillery equipment. Although the arms trade was lucrative, the domestic market was not neglected (Illustration 25). With increased pig iron production, a more efficient method for converting it to wrought iron was needed. In 1784, Henry Cort of Fontley in Hampshire patented the puddling process. The charcoal-fired finery was replaced by a coal-fired reverberatory furnace, with the fuel in a firebox and the cast iron to be converted to wrought iron in a separate hearth. Hot gases from the firebox were drawn with air across the iron by the

Illustration 25 A Cast ironfire grate. A reproduction of an Adam design. Artist and architect John Adam, brother of architects Robert and James Adam, was an early partner in the Carivn Company fPicture: 'The of Carron Companx 1759-1959')

draught from a chimney stack. The 'puddle' of molten iron was stirred with a long bar to promote the reaction of air and carbon, until the iron was decarburised. In the first part of the nineteenth century, the 'wet puddling' process was introduced, enabling rather more wrought iron to be obtained from a given quantity of pig iron. In 1783, Cort patented the used of profiled rolls in a rolling mill. Previously, such rolls had only been used for finishing off wrought iron shaped by forging (Mott, 1978). Bars could be finished to size and other simple shapes formed between a pair of grooved rolls rotating in opposite directions, one above the other (Gale, 1965). Within the next twenty years, the 'three-high mill' was developed. A visitor to a Midlands works in 1815 described '3 grooved rollers fixed upon each other so that the bar passes backwards and forwards through the rolls with amazing velocity, and at the same heat is made into a hoop of any size in the most beautiful manner'. As early as 1767, cast iron rails from Coalbrookdale had been laid to form a railway from the Kinnaird Colliery into the Carron Works (Raistrick, 1953). 70,000 cast iron rails were supplied in 1810-11 by the Glenbuck ironworks for William Jessop's Kilmarnock to Troon Railway, the first public railway in Scotland (Butt, 1967). However, the success of the 'Darlington Wrought Iron Railway' and the development of passenger railways created a major market for rolled


Year

Make l000 tons

Production and Stacks of Scotch Pig Iron. Illustration 26

Scottish Iron Production. Based on afigure by F J Rowan of Glasgow (Rowan, 1885)


wrought iron. With increasing demand for pig iron from foundries and for wrought iron plate from the Clyde shipbuilders, the Scottish iron industry expanded quickly in the 1830s (Illustration 26). The rate of growth was due in part to the introduction of the 'hot blast' by James Beaumont Neilson at the Clyde ironworks. Pre-heating the blast of air to the furnaces increased productivity and enabled great savings on fuel to be made. Another factor was the 'blackband' ironstone, a rich ore containing 50-70% of iron and lying alongside the coal seams. The ore contained enough carboniferous matter to serve as fuel for calcining (part-burning) it in open heaps; a preliminary to more efficient smelting in the blast furnace. With the hot-blast it became possible to use local uncoked coal in the furnaces and this was one of the practices which led some 'Scotch iron' to develop a poor reputation in the south. David Mushet had discovered the blackband ore at the beginning of the nineteenth century, close to the site of the Calder Ironworks then under construction near Coatbridge. This area, now known as 'The Monklands', became the focus of Scottish iron production, with the Baird's Gartsherrie Ironworks the largest works of all. Alexander Baird was established as a farmer and miller when in 1809 he leased the Woodside coalworks, near Dalserf. Afterwards, with his sons, he took on further coalfields and, in 1828, acquired a 40-year lease to work ironstone deposits near Gartsherrie. The first blast furnace was in production in 1830 and the firm became William Baird & Co. on retirement of Alexander from the business. Another son, James Baird, was responsible for innovations that involved very high blast temperatures and gave dramatic improvements in furnace productivity. In 1842 there were 16 hot-blast furnaces at Gartsherrie and in the years to 1864 other ironworks were acquired, under the Eglinton name, taking the number of furnaces to nearly 40. The total production capacity rose to 300,000 tons of pig iron per year, with up to 9,000 people employed at the various Baird works (see The Dictionary of National Biography, and Engineering, v21, 1876, p554). By the 1870s, the more accessible local reserves were being worked out and large quantities of cheaper ore from Cumberland and Cleveland were being brought in. Although Scotland was a major producer of pig iron from the 1830s, about one third of production was exported in that form to England and another third overseas. Hot-blast Scotch iron smelted from the blackband ores was best suited to making castings rather than for conversion to high quality wrought iron. Attempts to increase wrought iron production in the mid-1840s met with only limited success, being just too late to exploit the railway construction boom. Wrought iron production did increase gradually

however, so that by 1869, 338 puddling furnaces were supplying 44 rolling mills and consuming 200,000 tons of Scotch pig iron per year. Scottish foundries consumed a slightly greater quantity of pig iron in the same year (Campbell, 1980). 2.4

T h e early Scottish steel industry

In the early nineteenth century, small quantities of steel for cutting tools were made using either the cementation process or Huntsman's crucible process. In the mid-1840s, the Monkland Iron and Steel Company made only 100 tons of steel per year by these methods, of which 30 tons was made into files, probably a speciality of the firm. The steel produced was a tiny amount compared to the company's output of up to 400 tons of rolled wrought iron per week, which was in turn less than half of their weekly pig iron production of over 1000 tons from 9 blast-furnaces. After the development in the mid-1850s of the Bessemer process and a decade later of the Siemens process, the bulk production of comparatively cheap steel became possible (Pole, 1888). William Dixon made trials of the Bessemer process at the Govan Iron Works but, in common with several other ironmasters, he met with little success. The chemistry of the blackband ores, in particular a high phosphorous content, made them particularly unsuitable for the early Bessemer converters and very few were built in Scotland. The first large scale open-hearth steel plant in Scotland, at the Hallside works of the Steel Company of Scotland Ltd, was designed by Siemens and in production by the early 1870s. Using haematite pig iron from Cumberland (and pig iron smelted at Shotts Ironworks from haemetite ores), the plant was soon producing 2000 tons of steel per month, mainly in the form of rails, with some steel plate and forgings. Only in the mid-1880s, when most of the 240,000 tons annual production of Scottish steel was made in Siemens open-hearth furnaces, did steel begin to be used for general structural purposes. When members of the Iron and Steel Institute visited in 1885, steel beams were being rolled at the Dalzell Works of David Colville & Sons (Iron and Steel Institute, 1885). The shift in emphasis from iron towards steel production is reflected in company name changes (Riden, 1995). In 1888, the Glasgow Iron Company became the Glasgow Iron and Steel Company and a year later, the Summerlee Iron Company became the Summerlee and Mossend Iron and Steel Company Ltd. The Glengarnock Iron and Steel Company Ltd first operated under that name in 1891. Against this trend, the Monkland Iron and Steel Company had in the late 1880s become the Monkland Iron Company Ltd despite having opened its first open-hearth steel plant, rolling steel plate for the Clyde shipbuilders.


As steel industry technology advanced rapidly, a more innovative approach in the United States and in Germany saw Britain lose its industrial lead. As early as 1889, an engineer from Duisburg in Germany visited Scotland to demonstrate a universal steel rolling mill for parallel flanged steel girders and cruciform section columns (Sack, 1889). Such 'Universal Beams' are used today, rather than the old-style beams or joists with tapered flanges. Successful trials were made at the Motherwell works of David Colville & Sons and also at the works of the Steel Company of Scotland. However, the owners were not persuaded to invest in new plant, of a kind soon afterwards introduced on the

continent. From the late 1860s, iron joists rolled in Belgian and German mills from 'soft phosphoric iron' had been imported to Britain. A high phosphorous content made the wrought iron easier to roll but rendered the end product 'cold-short'. Belgian joists, though cheap, acquired a poor reputation. In 1887, 59,206 tons of iron 'girders, beams and pillars' worth ÂŁ1,000,000 were imported to Britain, the total rising to 69,3 13 tons the following year. Many Scottish builders would have made use of imported structural sections, except where prevented from doing so in an architect's specification.


3 STRUCTURAL USES OF IRON

3.1

Introduction

3.2

Buildings

The use of iron in buildings, bridges and other 3.2.1 Factories and warehouses structures is considered principally in this section, but reference should also be made in particular to sections In Scotland, the move towards the use of iron in large, 6 'Structural Elements' and 7.4 'Floor systems and multi-storey buildings coincided with the expansion their structural behaviour'. An indispensable reference northwards of Richard Arkwright's cotton spinning in the preparation of this guide has been the Royal enterprise. Before this, isolated examples of the use of Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments iron in buildings might be found at ironworks or rolling of Scotland (RCAHMS) publication 'Monuments of mills where the material was readily to hand. As the Industry' (Hay, 1986). There is no equivalent earlier Scottish industries associated with fishing and publication covering structural iron in non-industrial farming developed, their buildings remained smaller in buildings in Scotland and this Practitioners' Guide fills scale than the first cotton mills and continued in the some knowledge gaps in this area, while at the same tradition of masonry and timber construction. Upper time raising further questions. For information on early floors with timber boards, joists and primary bearers civil engineering works, and for the many engineers were supported on solid masonry walls, with heavy active in Scotland, the 'Biographical Dictionary of timber posts to provide occasional intermediate Civil Engineers' is recommended reading (Skempton, support as needed. Strong and fire-resistant stone 2002). The Structures Index includes summary details vaults provided storage space in the cellars and lower of each Scottish structure featured. For researching a storeys of warehouses, bonded stores and breweries, specific structure in detail, see Section 9 'Sources of but such accommodation was not generally suitable for Information and Advice'. factories.

Illustration 27 Bell Mill (or West Mill), Stanley Mills, Perthshire (1786-7)External view (Picture: Historic Scotland) Built to the design of Richard Arkwright, perhaps with the involvement of James Stobie, Surveyor to the Duke of Atholl, with millwright work by Lowe of Nottingham. Newly refurbished the building is of international importance as one of the finest and best preserved cotton mills with which Arkwright was concerned 21


Illustration 28 Bell Mill (or West Mill), Stunley Mills, Perthshire (1786-7)Cast iron storey posts with timber beams continuous over (Picture: Mark Watson,Historic Scotland)

ill, Arbroath (1837)(Picture: Illustration 29 Green Mark Watson,Historic Scotland) A relatively unusual solid circular section cast iron column, lying on the scrap heap after demolition of the building in 1993. Columns were almost always made hollow to reduce weight, save expensive iron and because quality was very d.i$cult to maintain in a very thick, solid casting.

Bell Mill at Stanley in Perthshire is a fine example of the f i s t generation of water-powered cotton mills, built in 1786 by Arkwright and his Scottish partners to house water frames (Cook, 1977). The five-storey building follows a pattern established by mills in England, with external walls of solid brickwork above a lower storey stonework plinth. To the upper floors, slender cruciform section cast iron 'storey posts' halve the 'pans of timber primary beams Over the 24 width of the building (Illustrations 27 and 28). Prior to refurbishment, it was noticed that several of the cast Posts loose and it may be that their primary function was machinery framing rather than floor support. For columns, cruciform sections fairly quickly gave way to circular sections. At Cartside Mill in Renfrewshire, built in 1790 but now demolished, the

Illustration 30 New Lanark Schoolroom (1817). Fine ironwork to the gallery (Picture: T Swailes)

Illustration 31 New h ~ r Schoolroom k (1817). Cast iron column with a quatrefoil cross-section (Picture: T. Swailes)

ends of cylindrical columns socketed into separate cast iron bases and capital. These are either of simple bell form, or extending into a plate to distribute the load over a greater area of timber. Circular cast iron columns are usually hollow, but solid columns are found occasionally, and more complex cross-sectional shapes were sometimes used for the sake of appearance (Illustrations 29,30 and 31). Large factory buildings with timber floors were vulnerable to fire and, in the textile industry, the dust arising from the processing of flax and cotton proved to be highly combustible. The first cotton mill at New Lanark had burned down in 1788, only two years after spinning had begun. At Stanley, a flax mill built in 1796 lasted just three years before it too was destroyed by fire. William Strutt, the son of one of Arkwright's English partners, devised a solution to the problem. In


Illustration 32 South Mills Dundee (c. date of this building 1864). Fireproof basements, partially demolished (Picture: RCAHMS)

Strutt's 'fireproof' building, the timber floor beams were protected by sheet iron, with shallow arches of hollow clay blocks forming the floors between (Fitton, 1958). Cast iron columns provided vertical support. Strutt's friend Charles Bage took this innovation a stage further at a flax mill completed in 1797 at Ditherington in Shrewsbury, by using cast iron for the beams as well as the columns (Skempton, 1962). The term 'fireproof' was a misnomer, but in Bage's building the internal structure is of incombustible materials throughout, an improvement in terms of fireresistance. Fireproof building construction was not slow to reach Scotland. The conduits appear to have been via Manchester to Glasgow, respectively the first and second cotton spinning cities in the world, and via Leeds to Dundee and Aberdeen, which similarly disputed the title of world flax spinning capital. In 1804-5 Henry Houldsworth built a cotton mill in Glasgow that set the pattern for other large cotton warp twisting and thread spinning mills in Scotland. Houldsworth's mill, now demolished, was powered by a steam engine supplied by the Birmingham firm of Boulton & Watt. Such firms influenced the structural design of many early factories for which they supplied engines. In some cases hollow columns served as heating pipes and in other cases as pipes to supply coal gas for lighting the mills (Stratton, 1997). An early fireproof mill, dating from 1816 but much modified since, survives in isolation on Old Rutherglen Road, Hutchesonstown, Glasgow. The building has twin rows of cast iron columns of diminishing thickness to each

Illustration 33 Crofhead Mill, Neilston: No 3 Mill built in 1881 (illustrated, to the Potts multiple arch system: compare Victoria Mill, Miles Platting) and No 4 Mill. 1885 (single arches, not shown) (Picture: T Swailes)


Illustration 34 Banner Mill, Aberdeen Artists Perspective View. The view from plans of 1837 by W Clerihew, shows according to the title block 'the property of Thomas Bannerman & Co. designed by Messrs. Hewes & Wren and their successors Messrs. Wren & Bennett'. (Picture: National Archives of Scotland)

brick-arched floor. Iron-framed cotton mill buildings dating from 1823-33 can be seen at Stanley and at New Lanark but many from this period have been lost. For fireproof floors, the shallow arch remained the most popular form prior to 1880 (Illustration 32). Efforts were sometimes made in large cotton mills to reduce the construction depth and the weight of floors by introducing secondary beams between the primaries to reduce the arch spans (Illustration 33). Structural aspects of various floor systems are considered in Section 7.4. It was common in the early Scottish mills for the structural ironwork to be supplied from Lancashire or Yorkshire as part of a package deal. The Leeds firm of Fenton, Murray & Wood supplied the structural framing, the spinning frames and a 20 horse-power steam engine for the 1808 Broadford Works in Aberdeen, the earliest surviving fireproof mill in Scotland (Watson, 1992). In 1820, the Manchester engineer and machine maker T C Hewes, who employed 140 to 150 men in erecting mills and fitting them out with machinery, supplied the framing for a fire-proof building to flax spinners Milne, Cruden & Co. of Aberdeen (Illustration 34). At New Lanark, there are some remnants of a scarcer form of fireproof flooring system than the brick arch. Floors and a very unusual pitched roof entirely framed in iron were built in the 1820s as a lightweight construction over a waterwheel pit and to fill in between two existing gable walls (Illustrations 35 to 37). Sandstone flags supported on iron joists provided an incombustible floor. A similar form of construction is to be found in Beehive Mill, a Manchester contemporary (Swailes, 1998). An interesting variant from the same period has survived at the Grandholm Works in Aberdeen (Illustration 38).

After 1830 Dundee became the major producer of coarse linens, produced from imported flax and, later, from jute, which was also in the manufacture of floor coverings. Flax mills in particular tended to be of fireproof construction and the buildings, including the structural ironwork, were invariably designed by one of Dundee's specialist textile engineering firms (Watson, 1990) (Illustration 39). Wool spinning did not present the same fire risk as spinning cotton or flax. In the Border wool towns and elsewhere, there are a number of large multi-storey mills with timber floors and cast iron columns. Nineteenth century warehouse buildings also tended to be timber floored (Illustration 40). Structural details progressed from simple storey posts in late eighteenth century buildings, with a variety of methods used to avoid crushing of continuous primary beams between the columns (Illustrations 42 to 44). Load transfer between storeys might be achieved by providing primary beams supported on a broad capital or on brackets either side of a continuous column, or by means of a cast iron saddle or 'crush box'. Iron was used for greater strength in the maltings and warehouses of the licensed malt whisky distilleries erected from the 1820s onwards. The lower floors in a typical malt barn are surfaced with quarry tiles or stone slabs and split into long working aisles by rows of cast iron columns (Illustration 45). Strength was required rather than fire-resistance, and at the 1864 Rosebank Distillery in Falkirk for instance, the primary beams are of timber, flitched with wrought iron plates. An advocate in the latter part of the nineteenth century for the use of wrought iron beams instead of cast iron beams in factories and warehouses was William Fairbairn. As a leading mill designer, he had investigated several mill collapses (Illustration 46). In 1865 an eight-storey sugar refinery building in Leith


Illustration 36 New Lanark: East end of Mill 3 (c. 1826) Iron framing exposed in the access ramps area (Picture: I: Swailes)

Illustration 35 New Lanark: East End of Mill 3 (c. 1826) Cast iron supports to stone stairs and landing. Mill 3 was built fireproof to replace a timber floored mill destroyed by fire in 1819. The east end of the building formed an iron framedfirebreak against Mill 4 also destroyed by fire in I883 (Picture: I: Swailes)

Illustration 37 New h n a r k : East en "'Mill 3 (c. 1826) The iron-framed attic (Picture: T Swailes)


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Illustration 40 Robertson's . ~ , z rWatsonS ) Bond, Seagate, Dundee (1897, rebuilt after afire in 1907) The structure exposed by partial demolition of this former deep-plan bonded warehouse during conversion to residential use (Picture: RCAHMS/ The Drawn Evidence)

S , Dundee (1894 and 1903) Illustration 39 Mid-Wnd 1 The iron framing to a powe. . - ~ mfactory under construction. The specialist textile engineering firm Robertston & Orchar of Dundee used cast iron beams here in the structural framing at a rime when rolled steel beams were being used in other kinds of building. The vibrations due to power looms demanded a very solidjloor and weaving sheds were usually of single storey construction with ground bearingfloor slabs. In this case a constricted, steepb sloping site made 3 and 4 srorey buildings with heavy suspendedfloors necessary (Picture: Dundee Archive and Record Centre)

Illustration 41 Ettrick Mills, Selkirk ( 1 835 and 1850) Front gable elevation, with date stones. Built as a mule spinning woollen mill in 1835, with timber floors on cast iron columns, extended in 1850. The fireproof floors in one of the 1850 wings are unusual in being built of local whinstone rather than brickwork (Picture: Shannon Tofts)

Illustration 42 Ettrick Mills, Selkirk (1835 and 1850) Cast iron column /timberfloor beam details (Picture: T Swailes)


Illustration 44 Ettrick Mills, Selkirk 1835framing (Picture: T Swailes)

Illustration 45 Ardbeg Distillery, Islay (after 1815): malting-floor (Picture: RCAHMS, from Hay, 1986, p40) The primary beams generally are longitudinally (beneath the floor joists) so as not to reduce headroom in the direction of working (Picture: RCAHMS, from Hay, 1986, p40)

Illustration , ,The collapse of Radc..,,, s Mill, G.Ur.mz, England from 'The Manchester limes', October 1844 At the time of the collapse, the construction of the building was nearing completion and a defective brick arch to the topfloor was in the course of being replaced. The arch gave way, a suppom'ng cast iron beamfailed, and then other arches and beamsfailed in a dramatic progressive collapse that left only half of the building standing. 20 people were killed (Picture: Manchester Central Library)

collapsed during construction, killing four people. The accident was blamed at the time (perhaps wrongly) on the failure of a column foundation. A press report described the building as being 'constructed entirely of iron and brick, so as to be completely fireproof' (The Builder, v23, p159). The structural robustness of iron-framed multi-storey buildings is considered in Section 7.

Illustratz 15 Cnr~ckMUs, Selkirk 1835framing. with later stet. _ rk strengthening (Picture: Z Swailes)

As rebuilt, the Leith sugar refinery building is similar to a design first published by Fairbairn in 1864, in which riveted wrought iron is used for the floor beams instead of cast iron (Fairbairn, 1870). Some of the


Illustration 49 Bonnington Sugar R e f i n e ~Leith , (1865-6) Interior view prior to conversion (Picture: T. Swailes)

~~~ustration 47 Design for a sugar refinery building (c. 1864) From WilliamFairbairn's book, 'On the application of cast iron and wrought iron to building purposes'. % heavyfloor imposed load due to 'moist sugar' was calculated at 400 lbs@ (19 M/&). The 'breaking weight' of the wrought iron girders, of approximately 29feet clear span, was given as 106 tons, equally distributed. The wall thickness of the hollow circular columns, their external diameter permitting stMdardisation of beam connections, increasedfrom I m in. at the groundfloor to in. at the top storey. Fairbairn explained the purpose of the wrought iron ties at each level: 'These am to retain the beams straight in their places until the arches are turnedfrom one end of the building to the othel: From this it will be obsewed that the tie-rods unite the archedfloors and the walls on each side, forming an excellent bond, giving tenacity and unity to the structure en masse' (Source: Fairbairn, 1864) lllustm%on48 Bonnington Sugar m c u Leith (l=) Exrernal view of buildingfbllaving conversion to I1.sidential use showing l&lhed original C& imnpathisspks to gable and roqflevel water tank encbmm. For a'e& of the coUapse ofthe building that thir nzplaced refer to 'Fall ofa new sugar e j k r y at Leith', l%e Buildq v23, Mach 4th, 1865,pI59. (Picaur?:RI!~eaton, Historic Scotland)

upper floors are timber rather than brick, reflecting the different imposed loads associated with different stages of the refining process and perhaps a desire to minimise foundation loads (Illustrations 47 to 50). Steel quickly eclipsed wrought iron as a material for rolled beams and joists towards the end of the nineteenth century. Steel beams were rolled by several manufacturers from the late 1870s and wrought iron beams probably not rolled after 1895 (Kennedy, 1880; Jackson, 1997). Some of the first rolled steel beams were used to support cotton mill floors in the late 1880s. Oldham in Lancashire had become the main centre for cotton spinning and the 'Oldham' model for increasingly large-scale mills spread nation-wide (Gurr & Hunt, 1989). An example is Anchor Mills in Paisley, designed by the Bradford mill architects Woodhouse and Morley (Illustration 5 1). In Glasgow, steel beams were used in William Leiper's Templeton Carpet Factory, completed in 1892 after the collapse of a f a ~ a d e during construction three years earlier. Structural design was by mill engineers G and A Harvey of Govan (Jackson, 1997). Variants on the queen post truss, partially or wholly of cast iron, were employed to provide useable attic spaces to the earliest fire-proof mills (Illustration 52). Other solutions to the problem of providing space beneath a pitched roof included timber collar trusses, with wrought iron ties fixed to the rafter feet and at the centre of the collar beam (Illustrations 57 and 58). In the mid-nineteenth century, an attic form developed peculiar to the Dundee jute and flax mills (Illustration 55).


Floors either timber boards on joists, as detail, or brickwork arches, on wrought iron girders

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Illustration 50 Bonnington Sugar Refinery, Leith (1865-6)Structural details (Picture: Z Swailes)


Illustration 51 Anchor Mills, Paisley: h ~Finishing & Mill (1889) Structural framing and floor construction details Large steel or wrought iron beams support flat floor slabs of closely spaced wrought iron joists in brick aggregate concrete. Cast iron columns support the beam ends. This type of 'fillerjoist' construction overtook the shallow arch as the favoured form offireprooffloor in mills in the 1880s (Picture: Z Swailes)

sheds that typically are tall multi-bay buildings, sometimes covering large areas, with good natural lighting via a part-glazed roof (Illustration 56). Roof structures may be of timber or of iron, spanning between cast iron columns and external solid masonry walls. Specialist ironwork contractors could supply a variety of standard roof designs (Illustrations 59 to 61). The iron roofs to the first generation of railway train sheds provided a pattern for many later mill and warehouse roofs. Wrought iron was often used for the tension members of a truss, with cheaper cast iron or timber for the compression members. One solution was trussed rafters giving direct support to sarking boards a traditional slate roof, avoiding the need for purlins and intermediate rafters (Illustrations 62 to 64). Illustration 52 North Mill, Belper: roof details (1803-4) An illustration showing William Strutt's mill with provision for a schoolroom in the roof space (Source: Rees, 1820).

Weaving was more difficult to mechanise than spinning but gradually ceased to be a cottage-based industry, as handlooms were organised within purpose built factories. Although successful power looms were developed in the 1820s, handloom weaving continued into the second half of the nineteenth century. Some later mill complexes include single storey weaving

3.2.2 Maritime buildings From the late eighteenth century, Thomas Telford and other civil engineers were responsible for the development of Scotland's inland and coastal communications, improving and building roads, canals and harbours. For much of this work, and particularly for construction in a hostile marine environment, stone masonry was the structural material of choice. However, iron structures did have advantages in that they could be prefabricated in relatively lightweight sections for ease of transportation and for rapid


Illustration 53 Cox's High Mill, Camperdown Works, Dundee (1857) (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

P Illustration 54 Douglas Mill, Dundee (1835, rebuilt fireproof c.1850) Similar cast iron arched trusses over an attic space survive in several Yorkshire mills (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

Illustration 56 Seafield Works, Dundee: West Factory (1859) Internal view of weaving shed: The Seafield Works specialised in the manufacture of jute carpet. The High Mill has been converted to housing in 1988-92 but the single storey iron framed weaving sheds were demolished. (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

Illustration 55 South Mills, Dundee: New Mill , exb 164 L !). A 'Gothic' cast iron framed attic This form of structure housed powered reel win-.., -chin -.,. -.,. 7d nk.,. ..ght from above was required so that the reeler could see flaws in the yarn. Large beam spans were not needed,for the floors below because the spinning frames were static, though heavy, and unlike the 'mules' used for cotton and wool, did not move backwards and forwards on tracks. About a dozen attics qf this type were built in the Dundee area (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

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cast iron column as downspout

Illustration 57 Seafle~aworks, Dundee: wesr ractory (1859) Iron framing components from the weavlng sheds Structural ironwork by Robertson & Orchar, Wallace Foundry. Polonceau roof trusses with timber and wrought iron principal rafers, wrought iron tension members and decorative cast iron struts. Unusual cast iron gutter beams trussed with wrought iron rods spanned between the rainwater down-pipe columns to support alternate roof trusses. Pieces of this weaving shed roof have been saved in the hope that a home may befound for them elsewhere (Picture: T. Swailes)

Illusrration 58 7 Commercial Street, Dundee (early 1860s) Iron roof trusses Built for iron and steel merchants Dow & Duncan, iron framing and roof trusses in the sryle of Robertson & Orchar (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)


assembly at inhospitable sites (Illustration 65). In 1799, for example, Robert Stevenson had proposed a beacon-type lighthouse with cast iron pillars for the Bell Rock, as an alternative to the stone tower eventually built along the lines of John Smeaton's Eddystone lighthouse (Leslie, 1999). In 1808 Stevenson laid a cast iron railway on supports over the uneven surface of the Bell Rock. Although covered by every tide since then the railway remains in service for access to the lighthouse (Stevenson, 1824). For the sides to a lighthouse lantern, iron met the requirement for a strong and durable glazed structure, protecting the lamp but with minimal obstruction to the passage of light.

Birmingham Railway (Sutherland, 1964 & 1997). By 1843, Fox was senior partner with Britains pre-eminent specialist railway engineering contractor, Fox, Henderson & CO,who fabricated and erected structural ironwork for several early railways in Scotland (Illustration 69). Scotland's oldest surviving train shed, built in 1842, was removed from its original site at Edinburgh Haymarket station for preservation at the railway museum in Bo'ness (Illustrations 7 1 to 72).

3.2.3 Train and goods sheds Many railway buildings are essentially of traditional construction. An early example is the three-storey goods shed at the Edinburgh terminus of the Edinburgh to Dakeith Railway (Illustrations 66 and 67). Steel beams have replaced the original timber floor beams, supported on a line of cast iron columns down the centre of the building (Illustration 68). The roofs of train sheds provided railway engineers with the opportunity to innovate. Among the earliest to be made entirely of wrought iron was that designed in 1837 for Euston Station in London by Charles Fox, one of Robert Stephenson's assistants on the London &

Boiler House Illustration 59 Seajield Works, Dun (1861) Ironwork details (Picture: Z U w ~ i l e s )

Illu tion 60 Seajield Works, Dundee: Boiler House (1861) Tht ..-n skeleton of the boiler house was preserved as an interesting structural feature when the High Mill was converted to housing 1988-92. (Picture: 7: Swailes)


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Illustration 61 Iron Roofs (1860s) Standard truss details from a manufacturer's promotional brochure. From the catalogue of Charles D. Young & Company, Engineers, Ironfounders, Contractors, &C., of the Britannia and St. Leonard's Ironworks, Edinburgh, 'Illustrations of iron structuresfor home and abroad. Consisting of stores, dwelling-houses, markets, arcades, railway stations and roojings, &C., &C., constructed of wrought and cast iron and corrugated sheets' (Picture: The Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers)


Illustration 62 Baltic Works, Arbroath (1861) External view (Picture: I: Swailes)

Illustration 63 Baltic Works, Arbroath (1861) Tie bar midspan connection (Picture: i? Swailes)

Illustration 64 Baltic Works, Arbroath (1861) Wrought iron roof details (Picture: I: Swailes)

Very long, single bay buildings, similar in form to the early train sheds, were built in ports for the temporary dry storage of goods on the quayside, between ship and train or wagon. The Dublin based engineer and ironwork contractor Richard Turner used 'deck beams' as curved principal rafters in his roofs (Illustration 73). Deck beams were so called as they were developed originally for use in the construction of ships such as the SV Carrick, now at the Scottish Maritime Museum in Irvine.

Corrugated iron, patented in 1829 by H.R. Palmer, a London civil engineer, provided a covering material with a strength and lightness to match the supporting iron structure below. Portable iron buildings of corrugated iron for the export market were introduced in the 1830s (Bellhouse, 1991). The first iron framed ship building slip roofs, constructed in Pembroke Dockyard in 1844-5, were covered with corrugated iron, to the following specification: 'No. 17, Birmingham wire gauge, weighing about 2'12 lbs. to the


Il~usrrationoo I ne Edinburgh and Dal~errh('Innocent') Railway Goods Shed and Terminus (c.1840) External view (Picture: RCAHMS)

Illustration 65 Iron Beacon on Hallirnan Scars, near Covesea Skerries (1844) Illustrated in Alan Stevenson 'S Lighthouse Treatise (Picture: R. A. Parton)

The Edinburgh and Dalkeith ('Innocent ') Illustratio, Railway Goods Shed and Terminus (c.1840). Internal view at 'rail level' prior to refurbishment. The present floor level is marked on one of the bases. (Picture: Crown Copyright: RCAHMS. Reproduced courtesy of JR Hume)

foot; the sheets are 2' - Z3/4" wide, containing six corrugations: their usual length is 7' , but they are cut to suit what may be required; they are laid with a top lap of 4'/2", riveted with two rows, 2'12" apart, of '12" X 3/~61' rivets, 4'14" from each other, and with a side lap of 11/4",fastened by one row of rivets 81/2"asunder' (Williams, 1847). The earlier timber-framed ship building slip roofs had been covered with plain sheet iron, sheet copper, zinc, slates, tarred paper, or canvas. Turner's prototype for the trussed arched form of roof was his 153' 6" clear span roof to Lime Street Station in Liverpool, constructed in the late 1840s (Turner, 1850). This was soon surpassed by Fox, Henderson & Co.'s roof of 211' span for Birmingham New Street Station, designed by E.A. Cowper (Phillips, 1855; Cowper, 1854). The Edinburgh engineer and pioneer

Illustration 68 The 'Edinburgh and Dalkeith ('Innocent') Railway Goods Shed and Terminals (c.1840) Steel beams on cast iron columns, over the cafe atfirst floor level. The steel beams replace early timber beams and bear the rolling mark LANARKSHIRE STEEL CO LD SCOTLAND 12 x 6 (Picture: ?: Swailes)



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illustration 71 Haymarket Station Edinburgh (1840).A broken cast iron strut fron a roof truss in storage at the Bo'ness Heritage Area where most of the trainshed is now re-erected. The cover plate has been removed, showing anchorage slots for 'upset' iron tie bar ends. (Picture: 1: Swailes)

Illustration 72 Haymarket Station Edinburgh (1840), Trainshed roof ironwork details (Source:Hay, 198# RCAHMS)

nE61stretion 33 Yilasgaw transit ShPd, by 8kW 1Srmt: Tke ??@feet k n g 'trmsit skd'm e $to& ~~Imgside the Cl*. suppitin& &s 10' Deck b e 5" h p f e m d ?hp! euwsdprka'pI +rs tp wmu& in*1WSPX slide of&# r ~ d j w n scmemd wi& 'C~IPU@CL"Pshmt iron 18 ga@~"* and^ the Imt$ =etion wmught imn PDIIIS~FZ~F. The side, w k m pe&Ey cappemmce was m e .bprtont, 'mmcg.~ttd ~ hiron, t gaivm&d I 6 gauge Y(Source:Tan, IH6) ( f &H,&0mh &&W&&&M@&%#% Zwftw. &%k &M d ~ p p r d h gi7QffPQS. l%? 0d&$~l df#d 7M$$SF" is a n ? p l ~ & ~mflae@m ng a wmugb i m bar wwghr iron dtiek &earn& to th lep #tLpast. TO the +kt dthe with a pkae w e W te i& (BC-: 1: SW&P)


Illustration 74 St Enoch Railway Station Rooj Glasgow (1877, now demolished) (Source:Hogg, 1882)

Illustration 76 Queen Street Station roof maker 5 plate Illustration 75 Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880) Wrought iron trussed arch ribs and steel tie (Picture: Network Rail) with forged ends (Source: Walmisley, 1888). Possibly the first engineer to specify steel ties in a roof of this kind was John Fowler at Liverpool Terminal Station (1872-31, for which tests on the steel gave a yield stress of 22 tons/ in2 (340 N/mm2). The reduction of the test specimen crosssectional area at the point offacture, a measure of ductility, was 15% (Matheson, 1873)

of 'graphic statics' R H Bow was involved in structural In common with suspension bridge chain-bars, the analysis aspects of the Birmingham roof (Bow, 1873). critical tension members in larger trussed arch or tied The void left by the bankruptcy of Fox, Henderson & arch roofs were of superior material. Proof-testing Co. in 1857 was filled by a number of firms, including would be to a stress well in excess of the working stress the Derby firm of Andrew Handyside & Co. taken for wrought iron joists and boiler-plate girders. Handyside's completed Scotland's largest roof span in Bessemer's patent of October 1855 had anticipated this 1877, the 204' span train shed to the now demolished application for steel for the making of tension bars St. Enoch Railway Station in Glasgow (Illustration 74). rolled in one piece (see Civil Engineer & Architects A roof modelled on the St Enoch roof survives over Journal, v 19, 1856, p242). However, early Bessemer what is now the Greater Manchester Exhibition Centre. steel proved unsuitable for such applications


Illustration 77 Aberdeen Station structural ironwork details to the old roof (1866-70) 'Howard and Ravenhill's patent bars' were used for the critical tie members, with the bars and their eyes rolled as one piece, rather than as separate pieces forge as constructed by the Aberdeenfirm of James Abernethy & Co. (Hird 1869) welded together: Th-

1111 ztion 78 Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880) Tied wrought iron arches on cast iron columns. Designed by the civil engineer James Carswell, with steel tie bars to the principal wrought iron roof arches. (Picture: Z Swailes)

Illustration 79 Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880). The gable screen and the cross-braced roof (Picture: Z Swailes)


Illustration 80 Glasgow Exhibition Building, The M a c h i n e ~Hall, 1888 (Source: Engineering, 1888)

(Illustration 75). Howard & Ravenhill's patent tie bars were specified for the original roof to Aberdeen Station, now replaced (Howard 1849; Hird 1869) (Illustration 77). A feature of many of the large 'engineered' iron roofs is tension cross-bracing between the principal rafters and beneath the roof covering. This is apparent at Glasgow's Queen Street Station, which has a fine over-arching roof (Gomrne & Walker, 1968) (Illustrations 76, 78 and 79).

3.2.4 Heavy engineering workshops In the late nineteenth century, massive single-storey machine halls or erecting shops were distinctive landmarks along the Clyde Valley. Several examples from 1890 or later are illustrated in 'Workshop of the British Empire' (Moss, 1977). Shipbuilding was principally an outdoor activity but heavy engineering work on marine engines or railway locomotives, for example, was carried out under cover. Gantry cranes handled heavy components over large clear floor areas. In most of these buildings heavy section timbers were used extensively, both in the roofs and for stability bracing above crane girder level. Qpically, the crane rails were laid on wrought iron plate girders, supported in turn on heavy cast iron stanchions of I-section and with stiffened perforated webs (Donnachie, 1977)

(Illustration 80). From the mid-1840s, iron buildings were erected over ship slips in the Royal Dockyards to enable wooden ships to be built under cover, but it appears that the spread to Scotland of this practice and the buildings associated with it was rather limited (Sutherland, 1989). Where Scotland did perhaps take a lead was in the early use of steel for industrial buildings as, after the success of the Forth Bridge, Arrol's constructed 42 steel-framed workshops of various types in the last few years of the nineteenth century (Jackson, 1998). 3.2.5 Public, commercial and residential buildings It is fairly easy to understand the structural arrangement of an industrial building in which the framing is clearly visible. In other large buildings, until the early twentieth century the exclusive design province of architects, the framing of floors and roofs is very often concealed. Sometimes elaborate measures were taken to disguise structural ironwork; making assumptions is unwise, and surprises are to be expected (Illustrations 81 to 85). Cast iron was used quite extensively in the 19th Century terraces of Glasgow's West End, although it may sometimes be mistaken for stone (Illustration 83).


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Illustration 81 Heaton Hall, Lancashire ( I 776) Staircase landing support beam Plan and details (Drawing: I: Swailes)

Illustration 82 Heaton Hall, Lancashire (1776) Staircase landing support beam Examined initially from ground floor level, the slender beam was assumed to be timber with an iron flitch plate. On investigation with a 'cover meter', the beam was found to be (most probably) of solid cast iron, moulded to exactly match the decorative plasterwork. Secondary beams of identical appearance provided a second surprise, being hollow 'dummies', provided purely for aesthetic reasons. (Picture: Joe Marsh, UMIST)


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Cast iro ts to a g, dflc .lay. The steps over the basement well are supported on cranked cast iron beams. Large cast iron columnsJlankporticos to other properties in Royal Crescent (Picture: Z Swailes)

Illustration 84 Balintore House, Kirriemuis Angus (1859) Cast iron primary girders and timber secondaryfloor beams exposed in the semi-derelict building (Picture: Paul Mitchell, Angus Council)

Suitable member sizes and layouts for timber framed floors to large rooms were published in contemporary carpentry manuals (Illustration 86). A timber girder for a long span would generally be made by first squaring a tree sawing it the then bolting it together with the sawn sides outwards. This gave an opportunity to examine the centre of the tree

Illustration 85 Balintore House, Kirriemuil; Angus (1859) Plan and details of cast ironfloor girders (Picture: RCAHMS)


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Illustration 86 Timberframedfloor details. The elements of the floor are bridging joists, notched over supporting binding joists, with ceiling joists notched undel: The bridging joists support woodenfloor boarding and typically span between binders spaced 6' apart, the binders in turn spanning between girders at 10' centres. From tables based on Tredgold's formulae, for a 'normal'floor loading of 120 l b s / p (5.8 W/m2),girders of 'Yellow Fir' (probably Yellow Pine) spaced at 10' would be 15" deep and 16" wide for a span of 22'. The recommended warehousefloor loading was 360 l b s m (17.2 M/m2) (Tarn,1886).


Illustration 87 Internally trussed timber beams (Nicholson, 1805)

for signs of decay and also aided drying of the timber. For longer spans, internal trussing of either oak or iron would be fixed into grooves between the two halves of the girder (Illustrations 87 and 88). Modern tests have shown such arrangements to be structurally rather ineffective (Dawes, 1985). As early as the 1730s, the architect William Adam used timber beams trussed with wrought iron when inserting a floor at Yester House, East Lothian (Stancliffe, 1986).

Extenurlly t,.,,ssed timber beams. the scagjoint to the timber beam above the spacer bracket (Picture: Mark Watson,Historic Scotland)

For the framed floor over the 41' wide King's Library in the British Museum, completed in 1825, the architect Robert Smirke's f i s t plan was to use cast iron girders trussed with wrought iron. However, the

Illustration 89 United College, St. Andrews University (1846) Cast iron girders to the timber-framedformer museumfloor Architect William Nixon, cast iron girders by Blaikie Bros. (Picture: University of St. Andrews)


engineer and ironfounder John Rastrick persuaded him that trussing rods were not needed (Slade, 1995). Rastrick's cast iron girders were of an innovative design, with perforated webs to minimise weight. Smirke used cast iron girders again at the London Customs House, providing a pattern that other architects followed. A drawing showing one example has been found in Scotland, although opening up works have not been carried out to determine if the floor is built as drawn (Illustration 89). Generally, cast iron beams should be suspected in longer spanning floors from the period 1825 to 1860. The latest known example dates from 1894, hidden within the construction depth of a wooden floor in a public library in Ashton-under-Lyne.

1862 to the design of architect Charles Wilson, used McConnel patent girders of 34' clear span to support timber joists spanning 10'. Professor W J M Rankine of Glasgow University was consulted about the strength of the floor while the building was under construction. Taking crowd loading as 120 lbs/ft2(5.75 M m 2 ) with another 30 lbs/ft2 (1.44 kN/m2) for the weight of the floor, Rankine concluded from his structural calculations that the McConnel girders were far too weak. The Town Council resolved to prop the McConnel girders at mid-span by an additional cast iron girder supported on cast iron columns. The use of a cast iron girder was not in accordance with Rankine's advice, which had been to use a girder of malleable iron (i.e. wrought iron).

By the mid-1850s, distrust of cast iron beams in building floors was fairly widespread after several building collapses (see 7.3.2). At a meeting of the Architectural Institute in Edinburgh in 1856, Thomas Davies gave details of proof-tests made for him on a variety of wrought iron girders made up of riveted angles and boiler plate (Davies, 1856). The tests had been carried out in the yard of an engineering works in Leith Walk owned by Mr Tod. Davies reported that Mr. Tod 'subsequently made many such beams for other parties, so that they have to some extent become known and used in this locality' (see Illustration 19).

Wrought iron beams and girders were lighter than the equivalent in cast iron and, as its use in buildings increased, wrought iron gained the advantage in terms of cost too. In 1884 a London engineering contractor compared a wrought iron plate girder (with a 3/~" X 15" deep plate web and 3" X 3" X 1' 8" riveted angle flanges), with the equivalent cast iron beam (Moreland, 1884). The wrought iron section weighed 44 lbslft (65 kglm) and cost 11 shillings per cwt, compared to 133 lbslft (198 kg/m) and 7 shillings per cwt for the cast iron. From around this time cast iron beams and girders tended to be used mainly in situations where durability was required, such as lintels and in ground floors over basements.

In 1855, Robert McConnel patented a novel form of iron floor beam that was used in a significant number of Glasgow buildings (Illustration 90). The floor to the great hall in Rutherglen Town Hall, constructed in

In the latter part of the nineteenth century, steel was used in a number of city centre buildings. Columns of

Illustration 90 McConnel patent girders. The girders have a top (compression) chord of wmught or cast iron and a bottom chord of wrought iron. Between the chords, the web of the girder is usually made with cast iron spacers held in place by vertical iron bolts. The supported timberfloor joists pass between the web spacers, thus the girder is both hidden from view and protected from fire by a plaster ceiling. (Source: from McConnel R. of Glasgow, ironfounder (1855). 'Beams or Girders for Buildings &c' Patenr number 1085)



Illustration 92 Edinburgh Royal Injnnary (1874). Iron framing for Roof of Main Tower (Picture: University of Edinburgh, Department of Special Collections, Rowand Anderson Collection /The Drawn Evidence Copyright Lothian Health Board Archive)

Illustration 93 McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (c. 1897) (Picture: I: Swailes)

Illustration 94 McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (c. 1897). Section drawing (Picture: University of Edinburgh, Department of Special Collections, Rowand Anderson Collection / The Drawn Evidence)


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Illustration 95 McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (c. 1877) Ironwork details (Picture: University of Edinburgh, Department of Special Collections, Rowand Anderson Collection / The Drawn Evidence)

cast iron appear to have been superseded by steel, without a 'wrought iron transition' between. Some cruciform section columns built up from riveted steel angles were used in Jenner's Building in Edinburgh's Princes Street, completed in 1895 (Jackson, 1997). In Atlantic Chambers in Glasgow, completed in 1900 to the design of architect J. J. Burnet, steel beams slot through cast iron columns, between load bearing masonry walls. Edinburgh's Scotsman Building, completed in 1902, was the first commercial building in Scotland to use steel both for columns and for beams, with steel columns built in to at least one f a ~ a d e (Jackson, 1998). For roofs, wrought iron straps and bolts or wedges assisted in the solution of jointing problems in the various forms of timber trusses introduced to Britain in the seventeenth century (Yeomans, 1992; Tarn, 1886; Newlands, 1857) (Illustration 91). The authors of the best-known carpentry manuals, Peter Nicholson and Thomas Tredgold, both worked in Scotland. Several drawings prepared by Nicholson for the University of Glasgow in 1806, including roof details, have been digitised for The Drawn Evidence project (see Section 9.8 and illustration 278).

Nineteenth century towers, spires and turrets are sometimes iron-framed, where previously timber would have been used (Illustration 92). Large span concert hall roofs, like the wrought iron roof to the Royal Albert Hall, evolved from the railway station roofs of the mid-nineteenth century (Swailes, 1997). The structure of Edinburgh's McEwan Hall combines old and new materials. Completed two decades after the architect R. Rowand Anderson submitted his competition winning design, the contract drawings show cast iron beams and columns framing the galleries (Illustrations 93 to 95). Parties to the Contract included the structural steelwork firm Redpath, Brown & Co. probably responsible for the roof structure. The brewer William McEwan funded the project.


3.2.6 Glasshouses andpre-fabricated iron buildings The eighteenth century had seen a great upsurge in interest in the sciences, including botany. Conservatories or 'hothouses' were built to facilitate the study and enjoyment of plants from warmer climates. Iron could be formed into thin bars and was an ideal material for the glazing bars, or astragals, with advantages over copper in terms of strength and stiffness. Slender supports to the panes of glass offered the least obstruction to sunlight. The Lanarkshire landscape gardener and writer J C Loudon, studied agriculture with an Edinburgh University professor while gaining practical experience with a landscape gardener based in Leith

Walk (Gloag, 1970). In 1817, he published 'Remarks on the Construction of hothouses' in which he advocated curvilinear forms to take best advantage of sunlight. For the construction of such structures, he developed a wrought iron glazing bar that could easily be curved to the required shape. An early Scottish example was built by an ironmaster, George Mushet, in the grounds of his house in Dalkeith. This conservatory is very unusual, being of cast iron throughout; the glazing bars included (Illustrations 96 & 97 also illustrations 214 to 216). On a grander scale, there are some fine conservatories and winter gardens in Scotland's public spaces, parks and botanic gardens. Some have been refurbished, while others await a saviour (Illustrations 98 to 103).

0l.Sthe parts wan mode in 111wfmtit.mM Faf@& House mmetvatoqI DrrlEceErh fe.IMS) S&ml uirtw. It s ~ m like& s rbfmn&?y 8 m - t d m $0Gm@% &tW@t% &a. wyflne &m80 s@~~tm k&9 neceyzt& bedn ~ 6 " ~ a h d . (Pk$ure: i? Swailes)


Illustration 97 Fairjield House conservatory, Dalkeith (c.1835)Ironwork details (Picture: Z Swailes)


Illustration 98 Palm House, Edinburgh (c. 1858). External view (Picture: Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh)

Illustration 99 Palm House, Edinburgh (c. 1858). Ironwork details (Picture: National Archives of Scotland)


Illustration 100 Palm House, Edinburgh (c. 1858). Ironwork details (Picture: National Archives of Scotland)


Illustration 101 Tollcross House Conservatoiy, Tollcross Park, Glasgow (1858) The structure after restoration (Picture: Heritage Engineering, The Industrial Heritage CO,Ltd)


Illustration 102 Tollcross Winter Gardens, To )ss Park, to Glasgow (1858) Condition of the ironwork pr restoration. Corrosion is most severe to the feet of the glazing bars (Picture: T Snrailes)

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Illustration 104 Springburn Park Winter Gardens (1899). The dilapidated iron-framed interior in 2001. The flller joists to the galleryfloors are likely to be steel (Picture: Z Swailes)

lllustrarion 103 Apnngaurn rark mnter Gardens (1899). An early rwentieth century view showing the bandstand, since removed (Source: Corporation of the City of Glasgow, 1914)


Illustration 105 The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition Building (1857).It was the boast of the Edinburgh contractors, C.D. Young & Co., that 'the extent of their works, and their favourable position in the iron and coal . districts, with a shipping port, enable them to undertake contracts to any extent, and at rates corresponding with the local advantages possessed' (Young, c.1863) (Picture: The Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers)

Illustrc r lOl ~eRi Museum of 5 (1861) Generb, ,,,teric. ..ew. L, ,870, the mus~,... ,.cat hall contained 'the largest collection in the World of the raw products of commerce'. Iron is used sparingly in the internalframing and in the rooj but its use was essential for the achievement of a slender and graceful structure (Picture: K Swailes)

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~liustration107 The Royal Museum of Scotland (1861)Details of Columns and Balustrade on First Floor Level. A drawing of 1859, signed by Captain Fmncis Fowke, R.E. Concerns about load capacity led to replacement of some of the slender columns to the lower level gallery with steel tubular sections in the 1950s. The steel sections 'ring' on being rapped with the knuckles, while the thicker walled cast iron columns are very solid and unresponsive. (Picture: National Archives of S c o t l m Drawn Evidence)


Illustration 109 The Grahamston Gate Gates provided an opportunity for the architectural iron foundries to display their talents. For this 20 ton triumphal arch the Grahamston Iron Company was awarded a Diploma of Honour at the Edinburgh International Exhibition of 1888. Afterwards it stood at the entrance to their works on Govan Avenue, Falkirk. Refirbishment and re-erection in 2002 was carried out by Carron Phoenix Limited as a tribute to the skills and artistry of the ironworkers of Falkirk (Picture: Historic Scotland)

Illustral~un1 1 v The Granurnsron Care Unsightly makeshift repairs to cracks, prior to conservation work (Picture: Historic Scotland)


Illustration l11 A bandstandfrom the catalogue of Walter MacFarlane & Co. This illustration may be compared with the structure at Magdalen Green, Dundee, shown in illustrations 2, 3 & 4.


Illustration 112 Walter MacFarlane C? CO'sSaracen Foundry (Source: a MacFarlane catalogue, c.1907). The trademark shown is found on some castings.

For the building to house the Great Exhibition of 1851 in London's Hyde Park, pre-fabrication was used on an unprecedented scale. The structural ironwork contractors were Fox, Henderson & Co., whose Renfrew works managed by David Henderson made some of the structural components. A succession of exhibitions followed, an important part of which was to celebrate the 'industrial arts'. Edinburgh ironwork contractors C D Young & Company made the building for the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition of 1857 (Illustration 105). The firm also provided the main building for London's International Exhibition of 1861, to the design of Captain Francis Fowke of the Royal Engineers. This building was the prototype for a permanent museum building in Edinburgh, now the Royal Museum, Chambers Street, also designed by Fowke, for which Prince Albert laid the foundation stone in October 1861 (see p274 and plate 22, Cassell's 'Old & New Edinburgh', Div'n IV) (Illustrations 106 and 107).

beyond for architectural ironwork and for kits for complete buildings was very considerable (Robertson, 1977; Herbert, 1978). 3.3

Bridges

3.3.1 Arch bridges Design drawings dated 1774 by the architect and engineer Robert Mylne have been found for a 'chinese

In 1850 Walter MacFarlane had founded the Saracen Foundry in Glasgow's East End, specialising in decorative iron castings (MacFarlane, 1882; Cox, 1991). The industry boomed in the second half of the nineteenth century, with central Scotland's foundries providing iron street furniture, shop fronts and architectural embellishments for most of Scotland's towns and cities (Illustrations 108 to 110). The Shire Album 'Cast Iron' draws liberally for illustrations on the c.1906 catalogue of McDowell, Steven and Co. and shows the vast range of foundry products (Fearn, 1990). MacFarlane's and others supplied a range of smallscale pre-fabricated structures, such as drinking fountains, conservatories, and bandstands, of which many examples survive in Scotland (Illustrations 111 and 112). In the latter part of the nineteenth century, the export market throughout the British Empire and

Illustration 113 Linlathen East Bridge, near Dundee (c.1804)(Picture: RCAHMS)


Illustration 114 Linlathen East Bridge, near Dundee (c.1804) (Picture: Roland Paxton)

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Illustration 116 Carron Br~dge(1863) Structural ironwork details. (Picture: Mark Watson, Hlstoric Scotland)


Illustration 117 Aqueduct over the River Almond carrying a feeder to the Edinburgh & Glasgow Union Canal (1818-21) General Wew The engineer Hugh Baird used a series of open cast iron frames in the shape of voussoirs bolted together to form an arch either side of the trough (Pauton, 1980). (Picture: Roland Paxton)

Illustration 118 Aqueduct over the River Almond carrying a feeder to the Edinburgh & Glasgow Union Canal (1818-21) Detail (Picture: Roland Paxton)

bridge' at Inveraray, with light iron arch ribs to two 43' spans and decorative wrought ironwork above (Ruddock 1979). It is not known if this bridge was ever built. Almost invariably iron arch bridges were of cast iron, a material superior to modem steel in terms of its compressive strength. Arched bridges for road and later for railway traffic continued to be built in cast into the second part of the nineteenth centuv.

a little over twenty years before being replaced with more durable cast iron ribs. Only a small number of cast iron bridges were erected in Scotland before 1840, although by that time Scotland was a major iron producer. John R Hume has prepared a list of cast iron bridges and identified Iames

& Co. as the leading Scottish contractor for cast iron arches in the 1850s and 186OS (Hume, 1978). A candidate for the title of Scotland's oldest iron bridge Carron Bridge, designed to carry both railway is at Linlathen near Dundee (Illustrations 113 and 114). locomotives and road traffic, crosses the fiver Spey The hoops of diminishing diameter to the cast iron arch high above the summer water level (Illustrations 'pandrels are characteristic of the and 116). Closed to traffic in 1965, the bridge Patent at in 1796 with Thornas was the subject of a Public Local Inquiry in 1993 after Wilson as engineer (lames, 1979). Surviving Wilson Grampian Regional Council proposed to strengthen the bridges are widely distributed. Spanish Town Bridge in Jamaica was exported from the Walker's foundry in -2 iRotherham, West Yorkshire and completed in 1801 (Blakiston, 1970). Another was erected a year later over the River Loddon in the grounds of the manor house at Stratfield Saye, Hampshire. Movement of one of the abutments caused cracking of the spandrels of the Stratfield Saye Bridge, which has recently been repaired and refurbished.

Other early cast iron bridges are Duchess Bridge at Langholm and its larger contemporary, the 151' 6" span Craigellachie Bridge (see Illustration 10). designed by Thomas Telford, over the Spey in Banffshire. Early wrought iron fixings and fasteners might be forged in Scotland, but from imported iron. For the main 184' laminated timber arch span to the Old Spey Bridge, Fochabers, the specification of Aberdeen architect Archibald Simpson called for the wrought iron and bolts to be '...best Swedish iron' (Day, 1987). Completed in 1832, Simpson's timber arches survived

Illu. Susp-. .-,e by John Stephenson Brown (1817). With a span of 100 feet, a width of 4 feet and provision for 'tuning ' the wire stays at the cast iron piers, the bridge was completed for a cost o f f 160. It was swept away by aflood in 1954 (Ruddock, 2002). (Source: 'Handbook of Structural Steelwork', Redpath, Brown & Co. Ltd, 1938, p458)


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Illustration 120 Redpath, Brown & Co., Iron Merchants (Acknowledgement: Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers) (Measom, 1859)


Suspension system (Source: Sutherland, 1988)

111~l.stration121 St De\,erzick Bridge. Aberdeenshire (1837) Linkage unit (Source: D(/?; 1983)

bridge by replacing its central cast iron arch rib with a pair of steel ribs of similar profile (Grampian Regional Council Department of Roads, 1994). The initial strength assessment of the bridge had been based on calculations only. After criticism of the calculations by an engineer appointed by Historic Scotland, the Inquiry was adjourned. A more thorough investigation was then carried out, involving full-scale instrumented static and dynamic load tests. Non-destructive testing techniques were employed alongside a close visual inspection of critical parts of the structure for defects. The fatigue limit for the cast iron was found to be close to calculated service stress levels, but no fatigue damage was found during inspection of the bridge. The bridge was proven safe for use without modification, except for the provision of a new deck. Load testing has confirmed the structural adequacy of other cast iron bridges where a more superficial

Illustration 123 Bridge of Oich, Abercalder; Invernesshire (1854) Prior to conservation The bridge, built to the Dredge patent, had been deteriorating since it was by-passed in 1932. It was taken into the care of Historic Scotland in 1996 (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)


C Illustration 124 Bridge of Oich, Abercaldel; Invernesshire (1854) The bridge, built to the Dredge patent, had been deteriorating since it was by-passed in 1932. It was taken into the care of Historic Scotland in 1996 and its refurbishment completed in 1997 led to a national civil engineering commendation in the 1998 Saltire Awards (Picture: Historic Scotland)

structural assessment might have led to unnecessary strengthening work or replacement (Blakelock, 1998). The arch was favoured by engineers for bridging longer spans when there were no headroom restrictions. Clearance beneath would sometimes be maximised by placing the arch above the deck. This solution was used for an aqueduct near Edinburgh,

with voussoir-shaped panels to the trough sides similar to Telford's earlier Longdon-on-Tern and Pont Cysyllte aqueducts (Illustrations 117 and 118).

3.3.2 Suspension bridges Several early experiments in 'vernacular' or intuitive suspension bridge design were made by enterprising

Illustration 125 Kings Bridge, Glasgow (1822) Illustrated in the Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine of 1824, the bridge was demolished in 1895 to make way for the Glasgow Central Railway (Boyce, 1996) (Picture: Mitchell Library, Glasgow)


Illustrntion 126 Roxbltrgh Viaduct Foot bridge (1850) (Picture: Crown Copyright: RCAHMS. Reproduced courtesy of JR Hume)

builders and blacksmiths in the Scottish Borders (Ruddock, 1990) (Illustrations 119 and 120). Captain Samuel Brown's 'engineered' Union Bridge was built over the River Tweed in 1820. Strengthened in 190203, and now with supplementary suspension cables, this is the oldest surviving road bridge of its type in Britain (Paxton, 1981).

Geoffrey Hay has recorded the of bridges 1986). A chain and hanger arrangement comprises round wrought iron eyed bars with wrought iron flat connecting links and pins (Day, 1983) (Illustration 121). An alternative chain arrangement using flat eyed bars on the 1856 St Andrew's Bridge in Glasgow was first devised by Brunel for the Clifton Suspension Bridge, to enable longer links to be used (Sutherland, 1988; Pugsley, 1973) (Illustration 122). Samuel Brown's Wellington Bridge, Aberdeen, completed in 1831, is still in service for pedestrians, but his bridge over the River Esk at Montrose, fared less well. In March 1830, with the bridge just a few months old, about 700 people were assembled on it to watch a boat race when one of the main chains gave

way and the bridge collapsed, with considerable loss of life (Rendel, 1841). Owen William's reinforced concrete replacement of 1928-30 was a conscious imitation of its predecessors (Chrimes, 1996). Another bridge built by Brown, William Tierney Clark's Hammersmith Bridge over the Thames, caused concern in 1869 when used as a viewing platform for boat race crowds (Smith, 1992). A stiffer form of bridge devised by Jarnes Dredge had hangers inclined into the span, a hybrid of the suspension and the cablestayed principles (Illustrations 123 and 124). Around 1820 Robert Stevenson proposed a novel form of suspension bridge, with the roadway supported above the level of the chains, for a crossing of the River Almond near Edinburgh (Leslie, 1999). This bridge was not constructed, but in 1822 architect John Herbertson Jnr designed and built a bridge across Glasgow's River Kelvin on the 'suspension girder' principle (Boyce, 1996) (Illustration 125). The iron footbridge alongside Roxburgh Viaduct over the Teviot on the British Railway,s Kelso branch is an interesting variant (Paxton, 1981) (Illustration 126).


3.3.3 Girder bridges

Level girder bridges of cast iron were used for short spans where approach gradient and headroom restrictions made it necessary. Made and erected by the Shotts Iron CO in 1831, Braid Burn bridge, Duddingston, on the former Edinburgh and Dalkeith Railway, is a very early example (Paxton, 1983). Lothian Regional Council carried out conservation works in 1983 and raising works in 2001 (New Civil Engineer 2003) (Illustration 127). I

Illustration 127 Edinburgh & Dalkeith Railway, Braid Bum Bridge (1831)General view. Made and erected by Shotts Iron Co. in 1831, the bridge was conserved in 1983 by Lothian Regional Council and raised in level in 2001 (Picture: New Civil Engineer/Roland Paxton)

Castings in one piece were either unsafe or impractical for longer spans, so long girders were cast in sections for bolting together at site, after the fashion of arch bridge ribs. Several railway engineers adopted the 'suspension girder' principle, in which the cast iron girder sections were trussed with wrought iron rods beneath, achieving spans in excess of 100'. A bridge of this type over the River Dee near Chester failed in 1847, due to a combination of several badly thought out structural details. In 1849 the influential 'Report of the Royal Commission appointed to inquire into the Application of Iron to Railway Structures', was published. The use of simple cast iron girder railway underbridges in Britain continued until 1882, when a bridge collapsed beneath a train at Inverythan on the Macduff and Turriff section of the Great North of Scotland Railway (Day, 2000) (Illustration 128).

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Zllustration 128 Great North of Scotland Railway, Girder Bridge at Inverythan (1857) Details of thefracture of a cast i n n girder near a mid-spanjoint. The rails were laid on a timber deck between pairs of cast iron girders, each of clear span 38 feet 8 inches, cast in two halves and fastened together at the centre. The bridge had been in service for 25 years but the girders were not over-stressed according to the Board of Trade rules. With the bene5t of hindsight, failure can now be attributed tofatigue and the propagation of a crack from a hidden defect near the base of the mid-span joint (Mariadin, 1882, and Day, 2000) (Picture: The Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers)


Illustration 129 Findhorn Viaduct (1858). Three 1503. spans. Engineer Joseph Mitchell, ironwork contractor William Fairbairn & Sons. From 'The Highland Railway: Photographs of Works', 1865. (Picture: The Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers) Illustration 130 Polloc & Govan Railway, Carmunnock Road Bridge (c. 1841) (Source: Dempsey, 1850) The bridge was erected by A. Thompson for the Govan Iron Works. Each tubular girder was 35 feet 3 inches long, 18 inches deep and constructed of 'the best boiler plate .'/n in. thick'. 3 in. X 3 in. X -/U in. angles connected the flange plates via '/2 in. rivets at an unusually close I'/z in. spacing. The tubes were filled with concrete to provide firm support to two courses of 9 inch brickwork, laid as near flat arches, over which the roadway was laid. Transverse ties of Low Moor (Yorkshire) wrought iron connected adjacent girders at middepth.

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Illustrat,,,, 131 Balmoral Bridgt ,657) Designed by I.K. Brunel (Picture: RCAHMS)


Illustration 132 Dalguise Waduct (1863). Spans of 209ft. and 141 ft. Engineer Joseph Mitchell, ironwork contractor William Fairbairn & Sons. From 'The Highland Railway: Photographs of Works', 1865 (Picture: The Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers)

Illustration 133 Bilston Glen fiaduct (1872, 1892) . In 1892, the four central spans of Thomas Bouch's 6 span wrought imn truss viaduct were replaced with a single span steel truss of over 300 feet, with smaller side spans at either end. The recently refurbished structure now forms part of Midlothian 's footpath and cycleway network. (Picture: British Railways Board (Residuary) Ltd)


A bridge constructed at Ardrossan in 1878 was fairly typical of the many cast iron girder railway overbridges still to be found in Scotland (Ministry of Transport, 1953). The bridge failed under an abnormally heavy load of 106 tons, as a ships crankshaft and bedplate were being drawn over it on a three-axle, twelvewheeled trailer. The bottom flange tensile stress at failure (i.e. 'the modulus of rupture') for the centre girder was estimated at 8.7 tons/in2 (134 N/mm2) including a 10% allowance for impact. No significant flaws were found in the fractures to the girders. For longer spans a more dependable alternative to the cast iron suspension girder was provided by William Fairbairn, a Manchester-based Scot. Fairbairn had diverse business interests, which included the building of iron ships and the manufacture of riveted wroughtiron plate boilers (Pole, 1877). In 1846 he patented a tubular form of riveted wrought iron girder and by 1870 his company had fabricated nearly-one thousand bridges, principally for railways, with spans from 40' to 300' (Smith, 1994) (Illustration 129). An isolated example of a wrought iron tubular bridge girder bridge in Glasgow pre-dates Fairbairn's patent by 5 years (Illustration 130).

The single plate web girder had advantages over the two-sided box in terms of ease of fabrication, access for maintenance, and economy. The riveted wrought iron plate girder road bridge spanning the River Dee near Balmoral Castle, completed in 1857 and designed by I K Brunel, (Illustration 131) is one of the earliest of the type in Scotland (Buchanan, 1980). It was a natural progression from a solid web to an open web, although it is likely that the perforated web for Balmoral Bridge was provided for aesthetic reasons. Brunel dismissed early wrought iron lattice girders in characteristic fashion, giving evidence to the 1847-49 'Iron Commission', saying 'if I were obliged to make a bridge of a great span with a number of short sticks, that might be one mode of meeting the difficulty'. Joseph Mitchell has been credited with introducing the lattice form of girder to Scotland (Biddle, 1983) (Illustration 132). The longer span box and lattice girders were superseded from the 1860s by various forms of trussed girder. In some early examples, cast iron was employed for truss compression members, with wrought iron used elsewhere. Many railway bridges have been replaced or strengthened during their lifetime, a good example being Bilston Glen Viaduct, built for the


Penicuik Railway in 1872 (Illustration 133). The 'double warren' parallel chord truss was one of the most popular forms in the last third of the nineteenth century, used by Thomas Bouch in his first Tay Bridge in 1879 and by William Henry Barlow in the side spans of its replacement, completed in 1887 (Shipway, 1987). 3.4

Ships

From the opening in 1834 of Tod & McGregor's shipyard on the Clyde for the construction of iron vessels, the growth of the Scottish shipbuilding industry owed much to the availability of cheap iron from Ayrshire and Lanarkshire (Wood, 1998). In the 1860s, composite construction using wooden hulls with iron framing was popular. Examples are the tea clipper Cutty Sark, built at Dumbarton in 1869by Scott & Linton, and the Carrick (Illustration 104). Characteristic design features are wrought iron knee

braces between the deck beams and the hull ribs to provide transverse stiffness, and cross-bracing to the hull sides to provide longitudinal stiffness (Scott, 1872) (Illustration 134). Amongst the earliest iron knees are to be seen in HMS Unicorn, built 1822-24 and now berthed at Dundee. Steel, being stronger than wrought iron, offered significant weight savings but early steel suffered from quality control problems. The cause of steel was not helped by high-profile failures such as the flanged and riveted boiler plates of the Russian royal yacht Livadia (Beaumont, 1880). Steel deck beams were patented in 1859, and Scotland's first steel steamer the Windsor Castle was built in the same year (Duckworth, 1967). The famous Columba was made of steel in 1878 (Paxton, 1990). Of ships built in Britain in 1880, 18% were steel, the figure rising to 68% by 1886 (Matheson, 1886).

Illustration I34 The Carrick (1864). Braced hull and knee braced deck beams (Picture: I: Swailes)


STRUCTURAL APPRAISAL

4.1

General principles

'Perhaps the very first application of the art of structural engineering for conservation is being able to look at a very rundown, neglected and dilapidated building and to imagine what it might become with some effort, rather than immediately assuming that it has passed the end of its useful life and should be demolished' (Hume, 1997). In a structural appraisal, information is gathered about the physical condition of an existing building and evaluated to determine if the building can safely meet the needs of its users. It is a process that should be carried out by or under the close supervision of a suitably experienced chartered civil or structural engineer. The appraisal of old buildings, with or without iron framing, requires a good knowledge of their details and materials of construction. A specialist in the conservation and repair of cast and wrought ironwork may be consulted at the discretion of the engineer for a project, to inform his or her structural appraisal. For small iron structures outside the scope of the Building Standards (Scotland) Regulations 2004, their owners may choose to entrust inspection, conservation, and repair to an experienced contractor. The involvement of a chartered engineer in the assessment of a cast iron drinking fountain may not be necessary, for example, although each case should be considered on an i n d i v i d ~ basis. ~~l

Illustration 135 Park Bridge, Aberdeenshire (1854). Abernethy & CO, Ferryhill Foundry (Picture: RCAHMS, J.R. Hume)

There are several circumstances in which a structural appraisal may be required. Advice may be needed on the causes and structural significance of defects noticed by the owner or occupants of a building. Structural problems may be obvious after a severe storm or a fire, but their extent may be more difficult to establish. An engineer is often a key member of the professional team assembled for the appraisal of a non-domestic building prior to its repair, refurbishment, or conversion to a new use. Sometimes the decision to purchase or lease a building will depend on the contents of a structural report by a chartered engineer.

4.2

Surveys and inspections

A 'guide to surveys and inspections of buildings and similar structures' has been published by the Institution of Structural Engineers (IStructE, 1991). Useful sections deal with safety matters and with the legal aspects of survey and inspection work. Warnings are given against the careless use of the term 'structural survey', which is understood by the house buying

Illustration 136 Langside Hill Church, Glasgow (1896) Cast iron columns beneath lath and plaster: The building is now a restaurant (Picture: Neil Ross, Historic Scotland)


Illustration 137 Gourock Rope Works (1866) Partial floor collapse (Picture: Malcolrn Wafters,Historic Scotland)

public to involve an assessment of far more than just the load-bearing elements of a building. The term 'survey' is associated with measurement and recording activities, while the term 'inspection' implies examination and evaluation.

The purpose of site survey and inspection work is to obtain sufficient information about a building to enable a satisfactory structural appraisal to be carried out. Although the main source of information is the building itself, the more information that can be

gleaned from documents or existing drawings the better. Iron bridges are quite often marked with a date and makers details but this is less often the case with buildings (Illustration 135). In any case, plaques or date stones may mislead. Similarly, drawings do not always present a true picture of what was built or how it may have been altered. Section 9 of this guide contains information of use when researching a building. In a conservatory, all of the structural elements may be iron, but in most buildings iron will be present alongside other materials. Factory and warehouse buildings often have a visible skeletal frame of iron, steel or timber within external masonry walls. In contrast, in nineteenth century residential, commercial and institutional buildings, iron supports may have been concealed to maintain an illusion of more traditional construction (Illustration 136). A search of archival sources for information about constructional

ZZZustration 138 Larchjield Works, Dundee (1865) High level inspection offire damage (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

Illustration 139 Larchfield Works, Dundee (1865) The interiot; destroyed by fire (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

Advice on assessing the risks associated with the inspection of traditional structures has been published by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE, 1990). It should be noted that this and much other published guidance pre-dates the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 1994 (and Approved Code of Practice), which define the responsibilities of designers, contractors and building owners for safety.


details may help the advance planning of any opening up works. Site survey work should be led by an experienced person who, if working alone, especially in an empty or partially empty multi-storey building, should set up a system of 'reporting in' at regular intervals. Before entering a building it is necessary to walk around the outside to become acquainted with its general layout and condition and to identify any hazards, such as loose masonry at high level, that may render entry to the building unsafe. The order of priority in making an internal inspection is to first of all identify any risks to personal safety and to eliminate them or devise means of avoiding them, and only then to make an inspection of the structure. Detailed inspection and recording work should be done while stationary, as while walking it is best to pay attention to where you are going, and to nothing else. The upper storeys of a building may be empty and dilapidated and possibly inaccessible because stairs are in an unsafe condition or missing. Ground floor tenants may be oblivious to a leaky roof and defective roof drainage. Floors that look safe when viewed in poor light and on a dry day should be inspected carefully from below before they are trusted. Water is the biggest cause of structural problems in semiderelict buildings and, given the right conditions, timber joist ends will rot quickly in damp masonry. Wrought iron or steel joist ends in filler joist floors may suffer from severe corrosion. Brickwork arch floors can lose their integrity through the leaching out of mortar from brickwork joints (Illustration 127).

illustration 140 Larchj~eldWorks, Dundee ( Debris after a destructive fire includes a typ rafter with seating for timber purlins (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)

..

.'

iron

Initial survey work generally takes the form of a visual inspection, though suitable preparations can be made beforehand if the need for opening up works is established ahead of a first site visit. A few engineers supplement their basic kit of site boots, hard hat, overalls, torch, measuring tapes, callipers, spirit level, plumb line, a few small tools, sectional ladder, camera, pad, pencil and paper with a small arsenal of more specialist equipment in the boot of the car. Most parts of an iron-framed building may be exposed and measurable, though not always readily accessible. Inspection and recording must be carried out in a systematic manner to ensure that no important features are overlooked. A simple ladder or access platform may be sufficient for safe access internally but scaffolding or a hydraulic mobile access platform (a 'cherry-picker' or a 'scissor-lift') may be necessary to gain access for external inspection at high level (Illusuations 13' and 13')' A sited access platform may be useful to enable access to be gained to higher levels over obstructed lower levels (IlluStI'ation 140). Specialists in rope-assisted access using climbing techniques are sometimes employed,

Illustration 141 Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880) Corrosion of rnof apex gusset. Close-up, ,tactile inspection, is necessary for wrought iron in particulas as the extent of corrosion can vary greatly bemeen adjacent parts of a structure. Repairs made. (Picture: CAN/Mott Macdonald/Nerwork Rail)


Codes of practice for the design of new structures in timber and masonry may prove adaptable for use when assessing those materials in an existing structure. Good general guidance is provided in CIRIA Report 111, 'Structural renovation of traditional buildings' (CIRIA 1986) and, by Poul Beckmann, in 'Structural aspects of building conservation' (Beckman, 1994). For more specific guidance on iron structures, reference should be made to Steel Construction Institute Publication 138, 'Appraisal of Existing Iron and Steel Structures' (Bussell, 1997).

Illustration 142 Clarence Mill, Bollington, England (1854) Opened up beam-column connection (Picture: T. Swailes)

such techniques being the province of trained experts only (Illustration 141). Opening up works may be carried out to determine typical floor construction details, beam profiles and bearing and connection details and to obtain samples of materials for testing. Opening up might require listed building consent but may, subject to the necessary approvals, be accepted as necessary disturbance. Explanations may be sought at specific locations for surface cracks or signs of corrosion, although unnecessary destruction of original finishes and construction must be avoided. The possibility of encountering hazardous materials should be considered in a risk assessment. The work should be done by a skilled worker, with ease of subsequent re-instatement in mind and under the direction of the project architect or engineer, as appropriate (Illustration 142). Useful general advice is contained in an English Heritage leaflet, 'Investigative work on historic buildings'.

4.3

Structural adequacy

Safety is the main criterion of structural adequacy, with strength, stability, robustness, and fire-resistance all considered in the appraisal of a building. Regulations and codes of practice offer generally accepted levels of safety for new construction, but flexibility is needed when dealing with old buildings. In 'Appraisal of Existing Structures', the Institution of Structural Engineers recommends that 'when assessing existing structures, engineering judgement should take precedence over compliance with the detailed clauses of Codes of Practice for structural design' (IStructE, 1996). Similar guidance is also given by the British Standards Institution in BS 7913: 1988 'Guide to the principles of the conservation of historic buildings'.

Buildings are most vulnerable to structural failure when in an incomplete state, either during construction, during structural alterations or after suffering severe damage caused by, for example, a fire or a gas explosion. Refurbishment, repair, and reconstruction works must be carefully planned, within the context of a well thought out Conservation Plan (see Section 1.5). Properly designed and constructed temporary works must ensure that the building or structure remains stable at all stages through to completion.

A holistic approach should be adopted when assessing a building. The first step is to try and understand how the structure supports its own weight, the loads imposed by its users, and wind forces. This involves tracing the paths taken by forces from where loads are applied, through the structure and into the foundations. In modern building frames, members and their connections are designed to carry forces (determined by structural analysis) along primary load paths that avoid 'non-structural' elements. The principles are covered very well in the Institution of Structural Engineers 'Stability of Buildings' (IStructE, 1988). In existing buildings, load paths do not respect the assumptions of a structural analysis and the classification of elements as non-structural is generally difficult, or misleading. Glazing or cladding may act as wind bracing, for example. Aspects of the 'whole structure behaviour' of iron framed buildings are discussed in Section 7. A stable structure is insensitive to minor disturbance. Stability is not a function of the strength of the elements of a building, but depends on how they are connected together and on how they interact with each other when the building is loaded. A robust building is stable but is also able to withstand an accident without the extent and severity of the resulting damage being out of proportion to its cause. When an existing ironframed building of five storeys or more is subject to a change of use, compliance with the requirements for resistance to disproportionate collapse contained in Building (Scotland) Regulations may need to be demonstrated. Proposals under discussion at the time of writing may extend requirements for resistance to


Clerestory+

Illacstriztion 143 Tke Kibble Palace, G h g o w Botanranrc G&m

(J873)S& devation (Rctrcm: Glasgow C@ CeimeilJ 4.4

111~9ftotionI 4 4 Tb Kibble Pabce, GI~pgowBatmic &&W (1673)(Picture: Glasgow City Council) The mational fwist of the dome between the inserted clerestory and the lantern is a p r e n t f r o m the c w m w of the g-lazng barn.

me & k t B 0f p&

E i t r t l W almtions

Alzerations my have beem made to -rectify defects, m modify a bui1d2ng for the changing a d s of its oceqmts, es m adapt it for a new use altctgcther. W buildings survive mthdy in t h e original state and mmtheir MSOBry b8sCSd an info-gtl that is m l y ccm@&e b a mwm&g md, at timtss,frustrating experience. Mmy af the buildings cov-rtred by this guide are m m m less dilapidated and h v been ~ modified s & - dth&.Part ttf a s t r u m q@d will be to identify past, altemtiaa% SO fa as this b possible?,and assess their s t r u m siflcmcc1.

A a ~ ~ a i sisd pm a assessment of t b suitability of a mdmbt building fsr a new m.This may ms3t in a c h m g ~in flm inqw~d dhpmportionate collapse to moat types d building, nDt loads. 'NW-strucmd* rnedifi@ations may have implitatiom. Eor emnple, if * d M '5 just tall ones. %me guidance on improving mistaace smto dispropartionatecollapse is given in an Instihnion d removed h within a m s ~ ~ n d efkm d ts r e k its ~ self-weight, the na~uralfmquen~yof v i M a n of the civil E~~~~ and practice GuEdeL ~ m ~ w a l for the wmt. Thc flow may appraisal c# i r o n - m e d textile mills' (Swailes, 1998) fluor may be e h @ 'baur~ce' mm& ~ h m W&& an and also be less (maim Section 7.3). eff$etiv@as a barrier to sumd. As well as bing safe, a buildkg must also be fit for its purpese, orsenricwble. S m i m b W failures include AIWS&iOns may hare moving -le0 c o ~ s e m r is y excessive deflections or vibrations under lead, building to a new site. An h--& a kit a f pss-f.aMca parts &it m W@&, p h d , unsightly craekihg, or poor resistance to water p t t a f i a n . Early in its li& an old buildiug may h m riveted or h 1 e I togethet Many such stpuchave deformed, perharps severely, inro a state of &a dismantlexf and r e w M using a cembinatian of qmbriupn, and somebm it will s ~ a& ~ anaf nrrw ~ . yQ G ~d&~@~PI* ~ was in md aesthetically desirable te leave it that way SnSXes5. A nine@imfh 1865 by John KWle m a eonsmatory at his ~ Q U W (Illustrations 143 and 144). besicb Lmh b g . By 1873 the structure kwl lmm Cast iron is not a ductile material, but iron-framed t & a am ~-d, m ~ d i f iin~ buildings cm generally withstand the eff-ts of Gwow's BoWc W e n s Wumtian 143). diff~entklfoundation settlement dw to their mlativeily flexible beam to column connections. Som-e r a m o n It m y be usxfu1a d it is always intmas* to try and and some 1 e cammon ~ fonns of conaections are undmmd why .a particular building h a bwa illusmd elsewhere in this guide. Where wmection mdfi4. 8 @ m ' ~ my details m inflexible or distortions are very large, the em am inadqw Or deficieficy in the -d besuas may fracture near their ends. S i p s of original structure. Buildkgs which emtaird h isertlement during construction can mmtimes be seen pmesam m quite likely b ham hem d W in the by careful examination of the masonry elevahns of nineteenth W w l y twentieth century to aeeom&b changes in the size and weight af n m z m , c h w e s many older buildings. in power systems, c h w a in dt@cess and goods handlin8 pmvisiicrm, or perhaps a change b m prduetisn to s'tiorage. Only in a very f"%w casm do buildings retain mu& early machinery 06 rrmxmants of

m, mnw


(Illustrations 147 to 149). Vertical supports may similarly have been either moved or removed. The width between columns in the early fireproof mill buildings was limited due to the use of relatively primitive forms of cast iron beam. Nineteenth century engineers like William Fairbairn showed considerable ingenuity in adapting older buildings to accommodate new and larger machinery (Illustration 150). Historical research may provide plausible explanations for unusual constmctional features (Illustrations 151 to 153). Sometimes alterations or additions may appear to be corrections of a poor original design concept (Illustration 154). 1

Illustration 145 Dange@eld Mill, Hawick (1874) (Picture: T Swailes) Original spinning mules by Platt Bros. of Oldham, and original drive shaft destroyed by fire in 2004

their original power transmission arrangements (Illustrations 145 and 146). Preservation of these rare in-situ survivals is of considerable historical importance. Dramatic changes may have been made to the internal arrangement of a multi-storey building, without much consideration being given to the effect on overall structural stability. In some cases the first floor has been removed resulting in a double height lower storey

-(LCU

4.5

Structural assessment

4.5.1 General principles The conclusions reached in the structural appraisal of a building will depend on the opinion of the engineer, based on his or her personal experience, informed to a greater or lesser extent by structural calculations. For old buildings, appraisal will generally be informed to a lesser extent by calculations, the main evidence being provided by the building itself. Signs of past structural movement are not always evidence of present distress. Careful medium-term monitoring of cracks or distortions may indicate a building is stable and that apparent defects date from a period early in its

!(

-

I CWT-

Illustration 146 Anchor Mills, Paisley: Domestic Finishing Mill (1889) Section showing the original rope drive arrangements (Picture: O Crown copyright RCAHMS Public Services)


Illustration 147 (a) and (b) Bell Mill (or West Mill), Stanley Mills, Perthshia (1786-7) (top)an original floor and (bottom) double height ground floor created by the removal of the original firstflool: (See Illustration 28 for the original storey post details) (Pictures: I: Swailes)

Illustration 148 Warehouse,James Watt Dock, Greenock (l885) fa) Gmeral view (b) Detail of elevation to dock Many elements of the ironframe have cast in part numberr presumably related to assembly dmwings. (Pictures: Mark Watson,Historic Scotland)

life, perhaps the result of initial settlement of the foundations. Imperfections are part of the character of an old building and worthy of conservation. Engineers need to develop a 'feel' for dealing with old structures in a sympathetic way and should avoid any temptation to meddle with a building that has stood the test of time. It has been suggested that rather than spend a lot of time calculating the structural capacity of an old building, scarce resources are better spent in examining the building and understanding why it stands up happily without modem intervention. Drastic interventions should not be contemplated before a building is well understood.

The forces on structural elements and their connections obtained from the structural analysis are then used in stress analyses, also based on mathematical models, to determine the stresses in the materials for comparison with safe limiting stresses.

Where calculations are made, they will generally include a structural analysis to determine the effects of estimated loads on an idealised mathematical model of the structure. However, as noted in Section 4.3, the structural analysis of old buildings is problematic.

For convenience in the design of modern buildings, it is not unusual for the same factor of safety to be used for the assessment of all elements. This is an illogical approach that is difficult to justify for the assessment of existing structures. The failure of a column that extends over several storeys and supports many beams would have potentially more severe consequences than the failure of one of the beams. In a filler joist floor, transverse distribution of load may be able to compensate for a local weakness, so filler joists might be assessed using a lower factor of safety than isolated beams.


Illustration 149 Warehouse, James Watt Dock, Greenock (1885)Internal view showing intermediate floor removed (Picture: ?: Swailes)

Illustration 150 Alterations to a Manchester cotton mill. Fairbairn devised a scheme that enabled a row of columns to be displaced laterally over the upper six storeys of an eight storey building, without stopping production. He introduced a wrought iron plate girder to transfer the concentrated load from the lowest of the offset columns (Fairbairn, 1866).

I Iuuurration 151 The Old Spinning Mill, Gr,,.,holm Works, Aberdeen (c. 1790, modified 1820s and c. 1900) :Occupied from 1858-1991 by J&J Crombie, famous for tweeds and the Crombie coat, a flax spinning mill was here in 1793. Historical research has revealed that after a$re in 1900 the building, except the water/stair towe,: was reduced in height by two storeys. (Watson, 1992) (Picture: 7: Swailes)


Illustration 152 The Old Spinning Mill, Grandholm Works, Aberdeen (c. 1790, modzfied 1820s and c. 1900) Interior view (Picture: T. Swailes)

'TI details

Illustration 153 The Old Spinning Mill, brandholm Works, Aberdeen (c. 1790, modified 1820s and c. 1900) Details of cast iron-framedfireproofconstruction. Plans of 1821 indicate that the mill had timberfloors. Fireproof additions to the works built in 1812, 1822 and 1826 have not survived. However: it seems likely that in the 1820s the upper floors of the old mill were replaced with the present fireproof construction of Caithness sandstone flags on a grid of cast iron joists and cast iron beams. An increase in headroom was achieved by supporting the cast iron joists within the depth of the main beams. Evidence of the originalfloor construction remains to parts of the ground floor over the basement (Picture: T. Swailes)


Illustration 154 Sea$eld Works, Dundee (1861) The multi-storeyjute mill was converted to flats in 1988-1992, and conta e m p l e s of trussed cast iron beams that are propped between their original support positions by cast iron columns. Exten trussing of beams of timber or cast iron with wrought iron rods was tried in buildings from the 1820s in order to achieve longer spans, such as might be required locally over boilers or an engine house, Thefailure of one such example was reported to a meeting of the Instih~tionof Civil Engineers (Fairbairn, 1847) (Picture: Mark Watson,Historic Scotland)

4.5.2. Stages in a structural assessment Structural adequacy may be apparent in a 'first stage assessment', without resort to calculations, or by using very simple calculations. Such calculations will use a conservative analysis model and conservative, lowerbound material stress limits. Testing of materials may be needed to distinguish wrought iron from steel, for example. If a building fails a simple first stage assessment, the initial analysis model is refined to more closely represent the actual condition of the building, in terms of member end and support conditions for example. Perhaps a three-dimensional analysis model will be created or allowance made for the inelastic nature of the materials. The removal of pieces of cast or wrought iron for mechanical testing with the sole aim of obtaining a higher safe limiting stress is not recommended (see Section 5 ) . Steel, on the other hand, is a more consistent material and sampling and testing may be worthwhile.

A second stage assessment may involve site tests to validate a more accurate structural analysis model.

Such tests will provide information about structural behaviour within the working load range, although they will not necessarily be reliable indicators of ultimate strength. For example, cast-iron framed textile mills were generally constructed with the beams well built in to the external masonry walls to help provide lateral stability. A simple site test procedure has been used to investigate beam end conditions in such cases (Illustration 155). When there is no floor above to provide a reaction, a temporary platform may be built to support weights for a load test, in the manner normally adopted for proof-loading of foundation piles (Illustration 156). 4.5.3 Sdatic load tests

Proof testing involves the application of a load in excess of the working load to confirm that the performance of the structure will be satisfactory at working loads. It was common in the nineteenth century to prove components by testing. Many cast iron beams were proof-tested prior to installation (although the practice was not universal) and some iron


roofs were also proved by loading a truss or pair of trusses. Testing of a typical component does not 'prove' the remainder and, like the sampling and testing of materials, a quasi-statistical approach may be used in determining the number of tests to be carried out. In existing buildings, proof-testing of floors, for example, can be an expensive and time-consuming procedure. However, a load test proving the adequacy of a structure that defies proof by calculation, but for which proof is required, is often less expensive than the unnecessary strengthening work that might otherwise be carried out. The Building Research Establishment recommended in IP9189 'Static load testing of building structures', that: 'the test load may be chosen as the maximum the structure should sustain without suffering permanent deformation or damage, or (0.25 X dead load X 1.25 imposed load), whichever is less'. Water is a convenient form of test load, as containers can be filled and emptied in a controlled manner. A nylon-reinforced rubber 'reservoir' was used successfully for instrumented tests on a floor in a modem building (Lloyd and Wright, 1992). Other papers on the load testing of modem buildings contain much information that may usefully be referred to when the testing of an iron-framed building is being contemplated (Menzies, 1978; Jones, 1978).

Illustration I55 Dean Clough Mills, H a l m , England: F Mill (1858) In cast-ironframed textile mills, beam ends were usually built well in to the external masonry walls to help provide lateral stability. In a prop test, a concentrated load is applied at mid-span of the beam, via an adjustable prop placed on top of a hydraulicjack and load measuring device, with the reaction provided by the beam to thefloor above (Swailes. 1995). Strain gauges are fitted along the sofit of the beam. Points of contra-flexureare determined from examination of the strain profile along the beam (Picture: 1: Swailes)

A satisfactory proof test will result in no structural damage, the response of the structure under the proof load will be nearly elastic, and the test will be repeatable. Isolation of a typical component under test is usually impractical and in testing a floor beam, for example, it is necessary to allow for the transverse distribution of load to adjacent beams by increasing the test load. Alternatively, all beams may be loaded. The stiffness of a floor may be increased greatly by composite action between the primary structural member under test and secondary members or finishes, but any corresponding increase in ultimate strength may be small. Of course, there is a risk that a proof test will not achieve the desired result. A safety structure should be provided with the minimum possible clearance beneath the part of the building under test, to take the load in the event of failure. ~d~~~~~~allowance must be made for dynamic loading effects. Back-propping through several storeys may be needed to prevent progressive collapse. In iron-framed buildings, it is necessary to consider the possibility of lateral instability and horizontal forces that may arise from the sudden failure of a bearing or connection or the brittle fracture of a cast iron beam. Fail-safe measures may include the provision of 'loose' vertical props and horizontal ties.


-

wrought imn beam

I

'

filler joists at 16" centres

Illustration 156 Ashton-under-Lyne Library, Weights on a temporary platform providing a reaction for a localised test load on afiller joistjZoo,: (Picture: i? Swailes)

4.5.4 Dynamic testing

Most buildings and bridges (except for suspension bridges) are essentially static structures and dynamic analysis is not used in their assessment. Even wind loads are reduced to equivalent static loads. However, dynamic testing may be used as a diagnostic tool by measuring either the ambient dynamic response of a structure or its response to forced vibrations. It is most

useful in the assessment of 'pure' structures, in which interpretation of the dynamic response is not made difficult by the stiffening effects of 'non-structural' elements. Potentially at least, it is a technique by which data can be obtained for more realistic computer modelling and analysis of structures. One application has been a comparative investigation of the condition of a series of nominally identical stone pinnacles to the Houses of Parliament in London (Ellis, 1998).


MATERIAL PROPERTIES

"To the student in architecture, engineering and building, there is scarcely any acquirement more essential to professional success than a knowledge of the properties of materials which are used in construction. It is more important than either skill in design or correctness of proportion, whatever the character of the structure - be it a house, a ship, a bridge, or a machine." (Fairbairn, 1852).

5.1

Introduction

The essential features of wrought iron and cast iron are described briefly in Section 1.3. Illustrations 5 to 8 show typical fracture surface textures and microstructures for the two materials. The engineering properties of wrought and cast iron are considered in more detail in this section. Methods of manufacture and how they influence material properties are described. Some modern test results are summarised in tabular form to enable a quick comparison to be made between the mechanical properties of wrought iron, cast iron and early mild steel (Illustration 157). The extent to which historical materials test data from the nineteenth century may be relied upon today is considered. The earliest tests on iron were carried out with very little scientific understanding of many of the factors that determine the properties of the material. Metallurgy was in its infancy at a time when the structural use of cast iron was in decline. Dr Percy, the pioneer of British metallurgy, first lectured on the subject at the Royal School of Mines in 1852.

5.2

Wrought iron

5.2.1 Metalliirgy artd texture The best wrought iron would generally have carbon and silicon contents of less than 0.2%. With more carbon or silicon, the iron would be harder and less tough. The chemical composition of a bloom of iron found on the site of sixteenth century forges on the shores of Loch Maree in Wester Ross was as follows: Carbon 0.192%, Silicon 0.077%, Sulphur 0.02%, Phosphorous 0.087%, Manganese 0.038%. A piece cut from the bloom had a tensile strength of 25.4 tons/inz (392 N/mmz), a yield stress of 13.6 tons/inz (210 N/mmz), and an extension at failure of 10.5% in a length of 10" (Dougal, 1894).

Evidence of iron making on a 'domestic' scale in Scotland, sometimes in the form of nothing more than furnace slag or cinder, dates from the first century BC (Tylecote, 1986). For making knives or swords at this time, relatively high phosphorous iron would be suitable, harder material being better able to 'take an edge'. Iron with 0.5% phosphorous, cold hammered or cold worked to reduce the thickness of the piece by 10%, has been found to have a hardness of 300 HV. This is twice as hard as iron with 0.1% carbon, subjected to the same treatment. Such high phosphorous iron would be 'cold-short', or lacking ductility at normal temperatures, and would not be suitable for general blacksmith's work or structural applications. This helps to explain why the early Scottish ironworking industries relied to some extent on bar iron brought from Sweden and Russia, made from ores containing little phosphorous. Sulphur and copper were other impurities that, even in small quantities, would render the iron 'red short', or difficult to work when heated. The appearance of the fracture of a wrought iron bar in tension depends to a considerable extent on the method of test and in particular on the rate of strain (Illustration 158). Wrought iron cools as it is rolled and the material crystallises to a solid. The crystals are not themselves elongated by the rolling process but they form instead in 'fibres' in the direction of rolling. Under impact loading, or at high rates of strain, failure will take place by cleavage of the crystals, exposing bright crystal facets in the fracture. At lower rates of strain, the crystals will separate along their edges, which show as a lustrous dark blue-grey colour in the fracture. It is common with wrought iron tensile test specimens to see bright crystalline clusters within a generally dark blue-grey fracture, showing variation of the material properties or stress distribution between individual 'fibres'. In its finished state, wrought iron comprises thin layers of almost pure iron with thin threads of slag visible between, except in the very best iron. These layers or laminations, around lmm to 3mm thick, may be apparent on inspection of the edges of a machined test piece. Sometimes, on pieces of wrought iron with quite severe surface corrosion, the grain or fibre of the material will be visible in the direction of rolling.


WROUGHT IRON '~ar 30 X 30 square section

1

range

mean

225 -250

382

I

1

range

-

-

337 398

I

Tensile test results 0.2% proof stress

-

ultimate stress

elongation af a

N/mm2

"/o

~tmm'

I I

mean

1

~lmm'

Nlmm2

mean 243

Rolled Joists 202 X 86 I-section

The bar acted as a nominal tie in the iron framing to a mid-nineteenth century textile elongation mill. Test samples were cut from along the at failure length. The irregular appearance of the "/o fractures and a relatively low density showed l4 32 the bar to be of poor quality iron.

Tensile test results ultimate stress 0.2% proof stress

mean

range

(

mean dens$

mean E value k~lmm~

kg~m

range

mean 'hamy

mean Hardness

I

HV20

Joules

web flanges '(E.31 , web 343 1325-355 160 1421-478 7~14 7 0 1 1 - 20 7800 436 410-466 299 280 - 325 flanges 185 195 23 18 244 '(C) web 374 161 194 10 5-12 358-384 267 262-271 371 flanges Tests on samples from three nominally identicaljoists, A, B and C, from a c.1868 'Fox & Barrett' floor in the Royal Albert Hall. There is some circumstantial evidence that the joists were imported from Belgium. '(A)

1

1

1

1

I

-

E A R L Y MILD STEEL f o r comparison

*~eam 304 X l50 I-section

0.2% proof stress

Tensile test results elongation at failure ultimate stress

range

%

Nlm m'

~lmm'

mean

mean

mean densiy

mean E value

kg/m

kNlmm2

range

mean Chqy

mean Hardness HV20

Joules

7840 40 449-467 197 260 257-262 458 24 - 3 2 web 7830 198 447-450 33 449 228 221 - 232 2 8 - 33 flanges Tests made on steel samples taken from a beam, dating from c.1905, and marked 'FrodinghamIron and Steel Company'.

141 143

C A S T IRON t

AV.Tension Flange Section Modulus, Z, mm3 X 105

Full-scale Bend Test Results

Small Bend Tests

Tensile Tests

Modulus of Rupture, fbt ~ l m' m me~n I mnoe

fbt N/mm2

Tensile stress, f, N/mm2

'Beam type 1 4~eam type 2 ' ~ e a mtype 3 ' ~ e a mtype 4 '

'All beams dated from'the mid-nineteenth'cent~r~ and were of flake graphite cast iron. small bend tests were 12.5 X 25 rectangular

bars cut from a beam of close to the average bending strength and tensile tests were generally on 16mm diameter specimens. S o u r c e s of test d a t a

' Kontos, N.

'Investigation of Wrought Iron as a Structural Material', MSc Dissertation, UMIST, 1996. Anastassopoulos, A. 'Structural Appraisal of old Iron Beams, MSc Dissertation, UMIST, 1997. Steude, T. 'The Strength of Wrought Iron and early Mild Steel Beams', MSc Dissertation, UMIST,2000. Swailes, T. & Parrnenter, M. 'Full-scale laboratory tests on cast-iron beams and an investigation of size effects', in Virdi, K S et a1 (Eds), 'Structural Assessment: the role of large scale and full-scale testing', E & F.N. Spon, 1997, 260-268. 'Swailes, T. & Marsh, 1 0. 'Structural Appraisal o f Iron-framed Textile Mills'. ICE Design B Practice Guide, Thomas Telford, 1998, p51.

Illrrstration 157 Tensile and Bend Test Data for Nineteenth Cent~~ry Stnrctural Iron


Illustration 158 Wrought iron axle fractures Accidents on the early railways resulting from the fracture of wrought iron axles led to research to determine the cause of such failures. Tests on axles for the London & Birmingham Railway Company showed both crystalline andfibrous fractures under impact loading (McConnel, 1843). Tests elsewhere produced similar results (Thorneycrofi,1850). Contributing to the discussion of a paper by David Kirkaldy to the Institution of Engineers in Scotland, WJ.M. Rankine presented these details of axle fractures (Source: Rankine, 1863).


5.2.2 Manufacture

Practice in making 'industrial' wrought iron in the late eighteenth and nineteenth century varied, but repeated re-heating and re-working was always used to achieve a better end product. The first stage of the process, as described by Aitken in 1826, was as follows: 'The pigs, being broken into two or three pieces each, are remelted in the refinery furnace (with coke), and the produce being let out into a shallow, flat, cast-iron trough,forms thick plates, called slabs'. The slabs (3 '12 cwt in total) being broken, are melted in the puddling furnace (with coal), and brought out in large masses, called balls; which while yet glowing hot, are laid under a very heavy hammer, and stamped into plates, which are then thrown into water, in order to cool them. The plates, being broken, are piled one on the other, to the height of about a foot and a half, and placed in a reverberatory furnace, called a boiling furnace; from which, when sufficiently heated (by coal), they are removed to the shingling hammer, where they are beaten into short, thick bars, called blooms (2 cwt in total) (Aitkin, 1826).

The bloom was the starting point for the manufacture of higher quality iron by mechanical working, and reheating a number of times (Illustrations 160 and 169). The product of the first rolling of the bloom was 'muck bar' or 'puddled bar', typically of 6" X 1" section (Gale, 1965). This was cut up cold, several pieces were then stacked or piled, reheated and welded into a solid mass by hammering, then rolled to produce 'common', 'merchant' or 'crown' iron (Illustrations 161 and 162). A second re-rolling produced 'best' iron (The British Standard Grade B was a later equivalent), for general structural work. A third re-rolling produced 'best best' or 'BB' iron (equivalent to the BS Grade A), for rivets and chains (Morgan, 1999). 'Best-Yorkshire' was a description reserved for iron of the highest possible quality (Skelton, 1924). The piling of rectangular section bars of iron for reheating and re-rolling took several forms. In the 'plate pile', for finished products such as chain links that were to be stressed longitudinally, the cut bars were piled with their axes parallel to the direction of stress. A variant was the 'box pile', with a piece of iron placed on edge either side of the plate pile, to box it in. Cross piling was used for boiler plate, subject to bi-axial stress, with the cut bars arranged in alternate layers at right angles. Iron frame re-located from Woolwich Dockyard

Shingling hammer (Naysmyth steam hammer for shingling)

Furnace


a. Piled bars, each 240mm X 70mm X 12mm

b. Shingled pile (welded under the hammer)

c. Shingled again, much distorted under the hammer

d. Rough rolled bar 50mm square

Illustration 160 Wrought iron samples at Blist's Hill, Ironbridge (Picture: I: Swailes)


Early in the nineteenth century, iron was worked under a water or steam powered forge or tilt hammer. In 1839 James Nasmyth invented the steam hammer, which from the 1840s was an absolutely indispensable ironworking tool (Illustration 163). The steam hammer was far superior to anything previously available for 'shingling' wrought iron, preparatory to rolling.

5.2.3 Mechanical properties ( a ) Tensile and compressive strength

Illustration 161 Iron ready for working under the steam hammer (Source: Minter; 1990)

Stresses for wrought iron for use in a structural assessment, using either permissible stress or limit states principles, are reviewed in a recent Steel Construction Institute publication (Bussell, 1997). BD21, the standard for the assessment of highway bridges and structures, gives characteristic yield stresses of 220 N/mm2for wrought iron and 230 N/mm2 for early mild steel. The established procedures for the assessment of early mild steel in structures can generally be adapted for the assessment of wrought iron. The differences between the two materials are considered in this sub-section, with some typical test data provided for comparison purposes. Yield stresses obtained in recent tests on wrought iron and early mild steel are given in Illustration 157. For samples from the rolled wrought iron joists, the

Illustration 162 Passing a heated iron bar through the rolls (Source: Minte~1990)


Illitstration 163 James Nasmyth S original sketch for the steam hammer The traditional forge or tilt hammer; whether powered by water or steam, was most suitable for small forgings as a larger piece placed on the anvil would take up the space needed for the fall of the hammer: In a typical early steam hammer; a massive five ton hammer block was attached to the piston rod of an inverted steam cylinder; arranged so as to be able to fall by gravity 5 feet or more onto the work piece on the anvil. In later hammers, the fall of the hammer was assisted by steam pressure acting from above (Source: from James Nasmyth, engineer an Autobiography edited by Samuel Smiles London, John Murray, 1897.


ultimate stresses are close to those for the mild steel beam samples, but the yield stresses are much higher. Some cold working during the rolling of the joists probably raised the yield stress (known as the 'Bauschinger effect', after its nineteenth century discoverer). The use of a 'characteristic' yield stress for wrought iron in excess of 220 N/mm2 is not recommended, and the analysis of test data may well lead to the adoption of a lower value. Wrought iron is a less consistent material than early mild steel, with greater variation in properties between structural sections and within a single section.

(b) Tocighness The Charpy values in Illustration 157 obtained at room temperature for samples from the early mild steel beam are close to the minimum expected for a modem low carbon steel (carbon content c 0.25%). On the other hand, the Charpy values for the wrought iron joist samples are much lower and their ductility, measured in terms of percentage elongation at failure, is poor. These rolled iron joists have strength, but at the expense of toughness and ductility. Toughness tests showed the wrought iron from S.S. Great Britain to be even worse. The energy required to break notched impact specimens of wrought iron from Brunel's ship at 20째C was about 4 ft.lb (5.4 Joules), a tenth of that obtained for specimens of a modern mild steel (Morgan, 1996). At the other extreme, Charpy values for wrought iron tie bar material from an 1887 trussed bridge in the U.S.A. ranged from 34 Joules to 144 Joules (Badoux, 1998). Wrought iron of so many qualities exists that no assumptions can be made about toughness. Some material is very poor and some very good, but one kind can only be distinguished from the other by testing.

(c) Directional properties The strength of wrought iron plate, made by the cross piling of bars prior to rolling, is typically about 85% of the strength of wrought iron bars rolled from the same material (Kirkaldy, 1863). The strength of a plate tested 'in the direction of the grain' (presumably the direction of the outer bars in a cross pile) was reckoned to be about 10% greater than that across the grain (Box, 1883). The influence of direction on properties may provide an explanation for variations in results obtained when testing samples of wrought iron during the course of a structural assessment. With respect to toughness, one authority quotes tests on a wrought iron giving an 'impact value' in the direction of rolling of 17.5 ft.lb (24 Joules), compared with 4.8 ft.lb. (6.5 Joules) perpendicular to the direction of rolling (Salmon, 1931).

5.2.4 Temperature and cold-working effects In the nineteenth century and early twentieth century, a number of quick quality tests were used in the blacksmith's shop to confirm the cold and hot-working characteristics of iron (Illustrations 164 to 166). Such tests might be the norm for wrought iron for railway structures but were probably not specified for most iron used in buildings. Punching of holes was preferred to drilling by structural ironwork fabricators, being a quicker and cheaper process. In the absence of subsequent heat treatment, punching would cold work the iron around the hole, leaving it locally harder and more brittle. In tests on boiler plate from several Yorkshire ironworks, it was found that punching holes reduced the static strength of a wrought iron plate by around 15% (Box, 1883). The problem was more severe in early steels. Barba found that the material within '/g'' of a sheared edge or punched hole in steel plate became very strong, hard and brittle (Unwin, 1910). One solution was to punch 'Is'' undersize and then ream the hole to the required diameter, thus removing the cold-worked material. Some attempts in the 1860s to use relatively hard 'puddled' steel for structural purposes failed because the effects of fabrication processes on the material were not understood. An illustration of the detrimental effects of cold working and the effectiveness of annealing as a remedy were provided by James Nasmyth. Three experiments were made on 'a bar of the very best 13/4" square wrought iron', prepared in different ways, then laid over an anvil and struck with a heavy hammer (Illustration 166). Nasmyth's tests showed the necessity of annealing wrought iron mechanical engineering components that were to some degree cold worked during - manufacture, such as railway axles. Subsequent more scientific investigations showed that annealing led to a slight reduction in static tensile strength but a slight increase in ductility. Steels in the medium carbon (> 0.25%C) and high carbon (> 0.5%C) categories are made hard and brittle when heated to the correct temperature and then cooled rapidly. Reheating to a lower temperature followed by cooling tempers the steel, 'letting down' the hardness and restoring a degree of toughness. Wrought iron, like mild steel, is not susceptible to heat treatment in this way. On cooling after exposure to high temperatures in a building fire, the strength properties of wrought iron will be unaffected. In fact, some gain in strength properties after exposure to high temperatures was found in tests on a late nineteenth century wrought iron with a relatively high phosphorous content of 0.25% (Kirby, 1986). During a fire, the structural behaviour of wrought iron is very similar to steel, the yield stress falling to about half its initial value at about 500째C. Where moderate distortion of wrought iron elements


Illustration 164a 'A bar is nicked and then bent (slowly), the fibrous or non*ousnature of the ",-cimen being exhibited at the fracture. For good wrought iron the fracture should show a silky fibre'. A bar nicked and bent in manner is shown in Illustration 5

ustration 164b Admiralty testsfor wrought iron plate bPec@edminimum angles to which plates of different thicknesses should be able to be bent when cold without fracture (Popplewell,1901)

has occurred as a result of fire, it is at least theoretically possible to straighten them for reuse or recycling, with the proviso that the effects of possible cold working must be removed by annealing.

5.2.5 Forge welding The earliest iron beams in Britain, dating from Roman times, were made by forge welding together small blooms of wrought iron. A 1.72m long 2nd century beam, found at Catterick, had cross section dimensions of 15 cm X 13 cm at the ends, 18 cm X 18 cm at midspan, and a mass of c.250 kilogrammes (Tylecote, 1986). Such beams appear to have been used over bath house furnace stoke holes. For the forge welding of wrought iron, Henry Adams advised that 'the pieces must be brought to a white heat and the scale swept off before they are put together' (Adams, 1907). David Kirkaldy camed out tensile tests in the nineteenth century on 18 forge welded to 1'14" diameter, and wrought-iron bars from 'l4" obtained joint efficiencies from 56% to 97%, with a mean of 8 1%. The loss of strength due to welding of steel was found to be greater, with joint efficiencies from 40% to 55% (Box, 1883). With suitable equipment, and appropriate expertise and quality control, forge welding of wrought iron is still a practical proposition. Prior to Nasmyth's invention of the steam hammer, large forgings such as ships anchors were made using what he called the 'bit by bit' system. Separately forged pieces were heated and welded together, but the welds were too often imperfect. By contrast, on the anvil block of the steam hammer, all parts were welded together into a homogeneous mass. Common iron was considered unsuitable for forging, as the scale or slag in it caused cracks. According to one authority, 'double best' and 'treble best' Staffordshire iron or ordinary Yorkshire iron were suitable for forgings, best Yorkshire being reserved for difficult work (Adams, 1907).

5.2.6 Historical test data and materials testing Illustration 164c A bar specimet sunched at a full red heat (1500 to 1600째F) with a punch '/3 the diameter or ~ a distancefrom the end of the bar of 1% width of the b a at times the diameter or width. The end of the bar is then split up to the hole, and then the two halves turned back. The test is failed if the original split extends or other indications offracture, cracks orflaws develop. This was one of the tests in the early twentieth century British Standard specifcation for Grade B bar iron lfor general purposes', the superior Grade A being reservedfor chains, cables, etc. (Skelton, 1924) Illustration 164 Nicking and cold bend testsfor wrought iron

Some historical test data on wrought iron has been brought together by James Sutherland (Doran, 1992). Early test reports for wrought iron give breaking loads, but can not be relied on for the more important elastic limit or yield point. Hydraulic testing machines were in use from early in the nineteenth century as an alternative to loading via dead weights. The Admiralty testing machine at the Woolwich Dockyard was made by Bramah & Co. of Pirnlico (Joseph Bramah being the inventor of the hydraulic press) for tests on cables and chains. The machine, with a frame length of over 100' and able to exert a pull in excess of 100 tons, is


IPustmtion 165 A variant Qn the h

5 H ~ r nTe$tfor wmught ima cm d&&y

in &&p1 Mmem M ~ & &

(Picture: I: Swail~s) described and illustrated in one of the earliest books devoted to the strength of materials (Barlow, 1837).

Test 1 The bar broke after 9 heavy bbws of a large sledge hammer; 'exhibiting that clear crystalline texture due to a good qualify of iron at that temperature: Test 2 (not illustrated) A piece of the same bar was raised to a red heat, then the surface of the bar was hammered until nearly cold. The bar broke after one slight blow from the hammer; showing a close crystalline fracture of the type obtained with steel.

David Kirkaldy carried out an important series of tests on wrought iron and 'puddled steel' for Robert Napier & Sons of Glasgow. Interim results of the tests were published in the Transactions of the Institution of Engineers in Scotland in 1859, and the full results published later in a book, giving the ultimate strengths of a wide variety of wrought irons (Napier, 1859, and Kirkaldy, 1863). Kirkaldy's results were diseminated widely (Illustration 167). In discussions of the work at the Institution of Engineers in Scotland in late 1862, W J M Rankine advocated the use of the elastic limit or stress at yield, rather than stress at breaking, as the measure of strength. Soon afterwards, Kirkaldy established his famous materials testing laboratory at Southwark, now preserved as a museum (Smith, 1981). In the last quarter of the nineteenth testing laboratories were set up in several technical colleges and universities. One of the most active was run by Alexander Kennedy, from 1874 Professor at University College, London. The testing machines could not only apply and measure loads with great control and accuracy, but also the strains or extensions of test specimens under gradually increasing load. From this period, accurate determination of the stressstrain curve for a material became a more routine matter. Several academics, both in Britain and abroad, published books on materials testing and material properties, with particular emphasis on wrought iron and steel (for example: Box, 1883; Popplewell, 1901; Unwin, 1910; Smith, 1911). Each book is in part a compendium of the test results obtained by its author, together with a summary of results previously published by others.

Test 3 A piece of the same bar was raised to a red heat, then the surface of the bar was hammered until nearly cold. The bar broke after one slight blow from the hammer, showing a close crystalline fracture of the type obtained with steel.

5.3.1 Metallurgy and texture

Illustration 166 James Nasmyth's wrought iron bar tests (Source: Nasmyth, 1842)

Cast iron is an alloy of iron with around 2 to 5% of cabon, other elements being present as impurities that modify its properties significantly (Angus, 1976).

5.3

Cast iron


Breakinfi WorofgbtaIn Tom per Sqnnro Inch of Original Gection.

F&m+

GecUon.

proportional to the amount of free graphite present. Graphite has a density of only 2250 kg/m3, which is much less than that of pure iron, so a strong grey iron tends to be denser than a weak one. The average density of a typical nineteenth century cast iron beam is about 7100 kg/m3.

The mechanical properties of cast iron are dependent partly on the raw materials used in manufacture but ,, ,, dvetsnni'hiti also to a very significant extent on the rate of cooling puddled stccl stk1*~zL?s of the casting. A metallurgist can gain more useful lron bars, Yorlrsl~lre , ,. Staffordshire information from the microstructure of cast iron ,, ,, Lmarkshire.. viewed under a microscope than from an analysis of its ,, ,, Irincashire ,, ,, Stvedlsli chemical composition. Thin parts cool more quickly ,, ,, llusslan.. than thicker parts and, when cast from the same melt, ,, ,, Scrap ,, ,, Sout11 IVnlcs will solidify to form cast iron of greater strength and Iron phtc, Yorkshire hardness. With very rapid cooling, or chilling, carbon ,, ,, Stnffordsliire . ,, ,, hnarkslrirc will not form into flakes but instead remains 'frozen' lron straps and nngle-irons within the crystal structure, forming a very hard and for strnp bulltling Angle-iron, Ianarlrsllirc brittle 'white iron', not at all suitable for structural ,, ,. Slllurdlire , purposes. The presence of silicon as an impurity is beneficial for the formation of grey cast iron as it promotes the deposition of free carbon. Ductile or Illustration 1 6 7 A sirmmary of strength data obtained by spheroidal graphite cast iron (known as SG iron) is a David Kirkaldy (So~irce:Moles~~~ortlz, 1867) twentieth century innovation, in which the addition of manganese leads to the formation of spheres of graphite which, unlike graphite flakes, do not act as Chemical analysis of nineteenth century cast iron often stress-raisers that cause brittleness. shows a phosphorous content of 1 to 2%. Most modern castings have a phosphorous content of less than OS%, and as early as 1888 a writer suggested 0.2% as a 5.3.2 Manufacture preferred upper limit (Hooper, 1888). Phosphorous The iron masters produced different kinds of pig iron gives the molten iron greater fluidity, but the solid from the same ore by varying the quantity of fuel in the finished product is harder and less tough. Castings for charge to the blast furnace and thus varying the structural work were usually made from a blend of smelting temperature (Rankine, 1869). The variation different pig irons. 'Scotch Pig', with its relatively in strength between different pig irons was fairly large high phosphorous content, was best suited for casting and not all were suitable or intended for structural intricate shapes with fine detail. applications. Steel bars for tools

.. .. .... .... ....

.. .. ....

.. .. .. ......

1

.. ... .. .. .... ..

The cast iron found in old structures is invariably flake graphite or grey cast iron, in which carbon is present in both 'combined' and 'free' forms. Iron and some of the carbon combine chemically at high temperature in the furnace to form iron carbide or cementite. On cooling slowly from the molten state, thin layers of cementite are deposited between thicker layers of iron, forming pearlite, so named because of its mother-ofpearl sheen when viewed through a microscope. The remaining carbon does not combine with the iron but instead precipitates on slow cooling to form flakes of graphite. Cast iron has low tensile strength, although in compression its strength is comparable with that of modem mild steel. It fractures as cracks propogate around the thin graphite flakes and then join to reveal a crystalline grey fracture - hence the term 'grey iron'. In broad terms, the tensile strength is inversely

No I pig iron was a grey cast iron produced with the greatest quantity of fuel and at the highest temperature, with a relatively high free carbon content in the form of graphite flakes. With a low melting temperature, No 1 iron was suitable for making fine and intricate castings where strength was not a primary concern. For structural applications, harder and stronger No 2 or No 3 iron was preferred, these being produced with rather less fuel. A still lower furnace temperature and less fuel would yield brittle white cast iron. White cast iron was not used for beams and columns, but could be produced as a hard wearing skin to a grey iron machinery casting by the use of metal mould linings to chill the surface. Specifications for structural cast irons sometimes included a minimum breaking weight for a small square or rectangular bar tested in bending. For foundry castings, a blend of pig irons and scrap iron would generally be re-melted in a cupola or an air


(a)

(b)

The force on the test specimen was applied crsing weights, the effect of which was amplified by means of a lever:

Specimens after testing.

Illcistration 168 Compression tests by Earon Hodgkinson (Source: Swailes, 2004).

furnace for casting. Investigations into the relative merits of hot-blast and cold-blast iron were inconclusive. Hotblast iron and in particular 'Scotch iron' developed a reputation for poor quality in some quarters. The hot-blast process certainly enabled large quantities of cheap iron to be produced from lower grade raw materials. Giving evidence in 1845 after the collapse of an iron-framed building, Williarn Fairbairn described hot-blast iron as 'an exceedingly llsefrrl iron, either as regards mixing, or its working qualities for the$ner descriptions of castings and light machinery' (Royal Commission, 1845). For heavy

castings, ~airbhirnrecommended a mixture of one-third hot-blast iron with about two-thirds of strong Welsh coldblast iron. Fairbairn's opinion was 'every description of metal is improved by mixture'. In some cases an engineer would specify a particular recipe but more often the choice of mix would be left to the experience of the ironfounder. The engineer might specify instead the required minimum breaking strength of small bars tested in bending. For cast iron beams and girders, all might be proof-tested or else one extra might be cast and tested to failure.

One innovation in mix design was Morries-Stirling's 'toughened cast iron', for which the molten ingredients were cast iron blended with up to a quarter its weight of wrought iron scrap (Owen, 1847). Tests made in 1847 for the Admiralty showed that girders of toughened cast iron were, on average, almost 40% stronger than girders made to the same pattern from ordinary cast iron. No examples have been found of the use of toughened cast iron in Scotland, although the patentee had a North Berwick address.

5.3.3 Meclzanical properties (a)

Compressive strength

Comprehensive mechanical engineering data on modern grey cast irons has been published by the British Cast Iron Research Association (Gilbert, 1977). The BCIRA data sheet for Grade 150 iron [see 5.3.3 (b)] gives values for ultimate compressive stress of 600N/mmz and a permissible direct compressive design stress of 156 N/mmz. BD21 gives a permissible


microstrain

stress of 156 N/mm2. BD21 gives a permissible (b) Tensile and bending strength I--------*------.-compressive stress of 154 N/mm2. For typical Victorian Nearest cast iron, the compressive strength is about 4 times the *BS 1452: l990 Grade 1961 Grade tensile strength, while for stronger modem cast irons, N/mmZ tons/in2 tons/in2 the ratio is nearer 3. 150 9-7 10 Test specimen shape is important for accurate determination of compressive strength. Satisfactory 180 11.7 12 results have been obtained using cylindrical specimens 200 12.9 with a length or height to diameter ratio in the range 1.5 to 3 (Illustration 168). As length and slenderness of a 220 142 14 compression element are increased, a point is eventually reached where failure is by instability rather 250 162 17 than by crushing of the material (See Section 6.4 --_------- .-----_--'Columns and Struts'). * replaced by European Standard BS EN 1561: 1997. '

*-

m '" * c -" -" -

--

--W

-.

Illustration 170 Modern grades of grey Cflake graphite) Cast Iron: Tensile and bending strength

In BS1452:1990, the modern standard for flake graphite cast iron, grades are determined principally on the basis of the tensile strength in N/mm2 of a standard test bar cast with a diameter of 30mm. Prior to metrication, the grade numbers related to the tensile


and, given the relation between the material elastic constants, the Shear Modulus (or Modulus of Rigidity) G may be taken as 0.4E (Gilbert, 1977).

strength in tons/in2. Most nineteenth century cast iron is of Grade 150, sometimes weaker. Grade 220 might be a rather exceptional nineteenth century iron, though a grade higher than this is routinely produced in modem foundries (Illustration 170). Mechanical tests are used in combination with careful examination of the microstructure of a polished and etched surface when determining the characteristics of a sample of cast iron.

(d)

Hardness

According to the modem standard BS1452, the grade of grey cast iron can be determined either directly in a tensile test, or indirectly estimated by means of a Brinell hardness test. However, nineteenth century The BCIRA data sheet for Grade 150 cast iron gives irons often have a high phosphorous content which, a permissible stress for direct tension of 38 N/mm2, according to an authority quoted by Angus (1976), with a maximum of 23 N/mm2 when designing for leads to an increase by 30 points Brinell for each 1% fatigue (Gilbert, 1977). BD21197 gives a maximum phosphorous. Ignorance of chemical composition may permissible tensile stress of 46 N/mm2 due to dead lead to a significant over-estimate of the grade of old loads. This is reduced towards 20 N/mm2 as the cast iron, if based on the BSI452 hardness correlation. proportion of live load to dead load increases, allowing for the importance for bridge structures of dynamic In the hardness test, performed using a standard piece of laboratory equipment, a steel ball is pressed into the loadings and fatigue. smooth surface of the test material by a known mass It should be noted that the modulus of rupture of a for a standard period of time. The alternative Vickers small bar tested in bending, the strength of a tensile test hardness test uses a diamond pyramid indenter. Up to specimen and the modulus of rupture of a large cast hardness numbers of about 300 HB, very rarely iron beam are not directly comparable, because of nonexceeded in nineteenth century grey cast irons, the linear material behaviour and size effects (see Vickers hardness number (HV) and the Brinell Illustration 157). hardness number (HB) are nominally the same. (c)

Portable hardness testers are available, but may give misleading indications because of 'skin effects'. Material at the surface of a casting, where cooling is more rapid, will be harder than material at the centre. Other mechanical properties will vary in a similar fashion through the thickness of a large casting (Illustration 171).

Deformation and stress/ strain characteristics

At working loads the response of cast iron structural elements will be only approximately elastic. For Grade 150 cast iron, the BCIRA data sheet gives a value for Young's Modulus of Elasticity E = 100 kN/mmz. For the assessment of the axial or bending deformations of structural sections, the effective E value may lie in the range 80 to 120 kN/mmZ, the lower value being applicable for very large beam sections. Values obtained in tests on different types of structural cast iron sections, suitable for use in calculations based on elastic theory, are given in Section 6. Even at low levels of stress, loading and unloading cast iron will result in a small permanent set and a 'closed loop' on the stress-strain curve (Illustration 169). The stressstrain characteristics of grey cast irons are considered in some detail by Angus (Angus, 1976).

(e)

Toughness

As a brittle material, cast iron has poor resistance to impact loads. Several simple impact tests were developed early in the twentieth century to identify steels vulnerable to shock loading, where no such problems could be detected by a normal tensile test (Salmon, 1931). In the Charpy test, a simply supported beam notched at mid-span on the tension side is struck by a hammer pendulum. The Izod test works on a similar principle, with the energy absorbed determined from the height to which the pendulum swings after fracturing a notched cantilever beam specimen. For energy absorption values less than 95 Joules, Charpy and Izod values are for practical purposes the same. For modern Grade 150 to Grade 220 modem cast irons, Charpy values of 8 to 16 Joules are to be expected for 20.3mm diameter bars (Angus, 1976). However, when the phosphorous content exceeds 0.7%, often the case with nineteenth century cast iron, lower Charpy values are likely even when the tensile strength is high.

In elastic materials the theoretical value of Poisson's ratio v is 0.25, but the response of cast iron is nonlinear, particularly in tension. Tests on a Grade 220 iron showed that Poisson's ratio decreased linearly from the theoretical value of 0.25 at a very low tensile stress to about 0.14 close to the ultimate tensile stress. A value of 0.22 therefore approximately represents the working tensile stress condition, while in compression a value of 0.25 is applicable over the normal working stress range (Angus, 1976). For practical purposes this may be too refined. According to Gilbert, an initial Poisson's ratio of 0.26 may be taken for grey cast iron

96


Illustration 171 Hardness and tensile strength variation across a large cast iron I - section (Picture: T Swailes)

Illustration 172 Tensile test specimen (Source: Hodgkinson, 1846) Thisform of specimen was devised to ensure concentricity of loading


SCOTTISH IRONSTRUCTURES

When fracture mechanics is used in a structural assessment to determine the effect of defects on strength, the material property 'plane strain fracture toughness' (KlC) is required. For samples from large nineteenth century beams of low grade cast iron from two different sources, values for K I C were obtained in the range 11.5 to 16.9 MN/m3" (Parmenter, 1997). Phosphorous contents were 0.9 to 2%.

5.3.4 Temperature depertdency of material properties Cast iron resists extremes of temperature rather better than do wrought iron and steel, but at normal temperatures has a similar coefficient of thermal expansion of 11 X 10-6per "C. The impact resistance of grey cast iron reduces by only 30% with a fall in temperature to -10O0C, so seasonal low temperatures do not have a very marked effect on structural cast iron. Grade 180 iron with a phosphorous content of around 1% has better dimensional stability at high temperatures than low phosphorous material (Angus, 1976). Up to about 60OoC,it is resistant to scaling (the progressive destruction of the casting surface by oxidation or other chemical attack), and it remains today a useful material for fire-bars and grates. Plastic creep will occur at temperatures above 40@C, even at relatively low stress levels (see also Section 7.5.1). At higher stress levels, creep will continue until failure. Under long term loads at high temperature, the loss of strength at 350째C is not significant, at 500째C the strength reduces to about ' 1 4 of its original value and at 800째C there is little residual strength. On cooling after exposure to temperatures of 600째C for several hours, cast iron shows no significant loss of strength (Kirby, 1986). However, a permanent loss of strength results on cooling from 75OoC,sometimes as much as 50%.

5.3.5 Historical test data and materials testing The results of the very earliest tests in compression are unreliable because the significance of test specimen shape and size was not understood. In a cubic compression test specimen, the material is placed in a complex stress state and appears stronger because of friction developed across the loaded faces. The ironfounder William Reynolds wrote to Thomas Telford in 1801 with the information that 'a cube of of an inch square of soft or gray cast iron resists a pressure of 80 cwts before it gives way and crcimbles into small pieces...'. This equates to an ultimate compressive stress of 989 N/mm2, much higher than the possible true value for the material compressive strength. Telford carried out many tests on cast and wrought iron in 1814 that were disseminated in influential 'strength of materials' books by Peter Barlow in 1817 and by Thomas Tredgold in 1822. Suitable forms for compression test specimens were eventually determined by Eaton Hodgkinson in Manchester (see Illustration 168). Hodgkinson also endeavoured to achieve a specimen and grip arrangement that delivered a perfectly concentric pull in tensile tests on cast iron (Illustration 172). Bending tests were easier, and a bending test on an inch square test bar cast alongside the main casting was used for quality control purposes for much of the nineteenth century. The bar was laid horizontally across simple supports spaced several feet apart and loaded at the centre until it broke. The large difference between the 'modulus of rupture' of a bar in bending and the tensile strength has already been referred to in Section 5.3.3 (b).


STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS

6.1

Introduction

This section is concerned with the characteristic features and structural properties of wrought iron and cast iron elements in tension, compression and bending. The influence on structural properties of method of manufacture and of defects is considered. Present day guidance on the assessment of element capacity is reviewed and placed in its historical context. Historical test data is of particular relevance because, in the absence of much modern data on structural iron, we rely upon it to a considerable degree in our present day methods of assessment. Both forces and vertical or lateral deflections could be measured with good accuracy in the nineteenth century, so most reports of tests on structural elements from this period are reliable. Fig 514.

6.2

Wrought iron ties

6.2.1 Details and manufacture

Pre-industrial wrought iron bars used in decorative work and for tying and pinning structural masonry or timbers were formed entirely by hammering at a white heat, with scarf-type lengthways joints made by forge welding. By the early nineteenth century, bar iron for structural purposes was rolled, with critical tension members being made from superior quality material. The specification for the chain-bars for Telford's Menai Bridge, built between 1819 and 1826, was described by Edward Cresy (Illustration 173). Captain Samuel Brown had patented his ideas for suspension bridge building in London in 1817 and in Edinburgh a year later (Day, 1983). Brown adopted a variety of bar and link details in his different bridges. It was normal practice to make the straight length of either a round or a rectangular bar and its terminal eyes separately and then weld them together. Brown at first advocated punching the holes in the flat link plates but later stipulated that they should be drilled (Illustration 174 and 175). Several early Borders suspension bridges used higher strength iron wire instead of bar iron. Wire manufacture was described in a contemporary Cyclopaedia (Rees, 1820). First, the end 6" to 8" of a large bar was heated at the forge. This short length was hammered out into a uniform round rod of 5' or 6' in

VPPLR L I W X I AND SOlNTl.

Illustration 173 Menai Suspension Bridge (1826): barchain and coupling link details 'The iron was of the best Shropshire manufacture, supplied from Upton Forge, by MI: Hazeldine of Shrewsbury. The bars were repeatedly drawn between cast iron rollers, grooved in various shapes, and afterwards proved at the works (to a tensile stress of I1 tons/in2),previous to being shipped for the Menai Straits'. A typical chain-bar was 10 feet long with a 3'/4 in. X I in. rectangular cross-section and end connections to facilitate tightening (Source: Cresy, 1847).

length under a small 50 pound tilt hammer, delivering around 20 strokes a minute. The rod was then cut from the bar and its tip further reduced by hammering on an anvil, for pulling or drawing through a holed plate. The wire was annealed after each pass through progressively smaller holes in the draw-plate. Mechanical properties depended on the extent to which the effects of cold working in drawing out the wire were countered by annealing. 6.2.2 Strength and assessment A permissible tensile stress of 77 N/mm2 (5 tons/in2) was in general use for the design of wrought iron in railway bridges in the second half of the nineteenth century. This gave a factor of safety of over 4 on ultimate stress, or about 3 on the yield stress of 220 N/mm2 now specified in BD 21. The manufacturing process produced differences in the ultimate strengths of different types of section that are not generally taken


Use of the full tensile capacity of a tie bar (see 5.2.3 a) depends on the end connections being at least as strong as the bar. High stresses and poor end details were a common factor in suspension bridge failures from the 1820s onwards. These failures influenced engineering practice in two ways. Firstly, early optimism with respect to safe working stresses was replaced by a more cautious approach. Secondly, experiments were carried out with the aim of finding efficient and safe forms of tension member end connections.

Illustration 174 Union Bridge, near Benvick (1820) General view (Picrnre: Crown Copyright: RCAHMS. Reproduced courtesv of JR Hume)

Illustration 175 Union Bridge, near Berwick (1820) Chain details Each chain-bar consists of a 2 in. diameter wrought iron bar 15 feet long with a forged and welded eye at both ends. The original roadway suspension system, now supplemented, consisted of three tiers of chains with vertical suspender bars of 1 in. diameter spaced 5 feet apart. (Picture: T. Swailes)

At the time of the design competition for the Clifton suspension bridge it was commonly believed that a small bar of wrought iron tested in tension would yield at about 13 tons/in2(201 N/mm2)and break at about 23 tons/in2(355N/mm2)(Pugsley, 1976). A wide range of design stresses was proposed, from 4 to l 0 tons/in2(62 to 155 N/mm2). Brunel himself proposed design stresses of 8 tons/in2 (124 N/mmz) in 1829 and 6'12 tons/in2 (100 N/mm2) in 1830, before settling for 5 tons/in2(77 N/mm2)in 1838. Brunel's fist design used chain-bars of 12' in length. These were also called links, being without the intermediate short linking pieces used by Brown and Telford. Improvements in manufacturing enabled Brunel to specify 20' long chain-bars by 1838. Ewing Matheson wrote of such structures in 1873 that 'the links which compose the chain were formerly manufactured by welding the heads to a flat bar; and the proportions of the heads are in most of the old bridges imperfect. At the present time the link is always rolled together with the heads in one piece, and the proportions of the head have been improved' (Matheson, 1873).

In 1967, the Point Pleasant Bridge (or Silver Bridge) over the Ohio River in the USA collapsed due to corrosion-fatigue failure at the eye end of a steel suspension chain-bar. This prompted a structural assessment of the Hungerford Bridge chains that had been reused for the Clifton Suspension Bridge (Bulson, 1983). A finite element analysis showed that the original proof-loading specified by Brunel to check the strength of the weld between the bar and the eyes into account in assessment. According to the engineer would have caused localised yielding in the eye at its for the Skerne Iron Works in Darlington, the commoner bearing with the connection pin. Theoretical analysis brands of (plate) iron would bear 20 tons/in2 (309 was accompanied by strain measurements on the N/mm2) along the grain and 18 tons/in2 (278 N/mm2) bridge and, under laboratory conditions, by tests on a across the grain (Hutcheson, 1879). Tee and angle full-size replica of the eye-bar end. It was concluded sections, often used for tension members, would be that the residual compressive stresses remaining in the about 2 tons/in2 (3 1 N/rnm2) stronger. For bridges eye after proof-loading were effective protection subject to dynamic loads, the use of a relatively low against fatigue due to live load stress variations. permissible stress generally proved to be a satisfactory Separate tests on wrought iron suspender rods from the safeguard against fatigue failure, a phenomenon still bridge showed that the forge-welding of the eyes was not fully understood in the 1880s (Fidler, 1887). The at least 85% efficient (see Section 5.4). fatigue endurance limit for wrought iron has been found to be about one third of the elastic limit or yield Results have been reported of a fracture critical study stress (Cullimore, 1967). of the eye bar connections to a trussed wrought iron


bridge in Texas (Badoux, 1998). The bridge, built in 1887, at one time carried pedestrian and vehicular M i c , but was to be refurbished in 1998 for pedestrian use only. Tension members were up to 25mm X lOOmm rectangular section and the connecting pins from 50mm to lOOmm diameter. Material sampling and testing provided data for a linear elastic fracture mechanics analysis, from which critical crack sizes of over 13mrn were calculated for the pins and eye bars. The critical crack or flaw size is the size at which a crack will propogate under the applied stresses, leading to fracture. Trials showed that flaws smaller than 5mm could be detected by ultrasonic testing using low frequency transducers. Ultrasonic testing of the fracture critical eye bars and pins in the bridge showed them to be in good condition and repairs were needed only to remedy limited corrosion deterioration. Ultrasonic testing has been used in Italy to locate and characterise sub-surface discontinuities in forged sixteenth century wrought iron (Bartolini, 1997). Surface stress-related cracks were detected using a magnetic particle technique. Concentrations of magnetic field lines at discontinuities (at or close to the surface) are made apparent by heaping of magnetic powder. 6.3

Wrought iron beams

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6.3.1 Rolled sections development, details and manufacture (a)

Glazing bars

The structural use of wrought iron in the first quarter of the nineteenth century was rather limited, despite the innovations of Henry Cort and others (see Section 2.3). The small sections available were too slight to compete with timber or cast iron for joists, beams and girders. One structural application was the sash-bar or glazing bar, invented by J C Loudon in 1816 (Gloag, 1970). These were made by passing heated plain iron bar through profiled rolls. (b)

Rails

The success of the passenger railways was a spur to further development. Wrought iron rails, unlike cast iron, were not prone to fracture with potentially catastrophic consequences. The pioneering 'Darlington Wrought Iron Railway' opened in 1825 generated international interest (Oyenhausen, 1829). In the two decades following its completion, the astonishingly rapid development of more powerful and heavier locomotive engines made a stronger permanent way necessary. The original rails for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway of 1829 were rolled in 15' lengths, spanning 3' between stone bearing blocks and

Illustration 176 Rolls for fish-bellied wrought iron rails Reproducedfrom 'Strengthof Materials' (Barlow, 1837). Barlow described the working of the rolls thus: 'The iron is first drawn down to a square bar of a proper size; it is then passed successively through the rollers, as numbered in the figure'. The rail was passed on its side through all the grooves between the rolls except for groove No. 3, where 'the lower cylinder is turned eccentric to the axis of the rollers, so that as the iron passes on it is rendered of differentdepths, as shown in Figure 4 '.

weighing 33 Ibslyard (16 kglm) (Ferneyhough, 1980). An ingenious arrangement enabled rails to be rolled with an economical 'fish-bellied' longitudinal profile between supporting stone blocks (Illustration 176). Heavy parallel rails of 75 lbslyard (37 kglm) were first tried prior to 1837 on some sections of the London and Birmingham Railway (Lecount, 1839). F S Williams commented on the problems of making large sections; 'difficulties have, until lately, existed in the rolling out of such heavy rails at the manufactories; but the improvement of machinery now allows of their being prepared with greater facility and at a less cost' (Williams, 1852). Our present day system, with parallel rails laid across closely spaced sleepers on a bed of stone ballast, became the preferred form of permanent way construction only after 1850. The life of rails depended very much on the quality of the wearing surface, with laminar wrought iron tending to wear unevenly and to smear, unlike more uniform steel. Submitting a tender for the supply of rails in 1865 to the Great Northern Railway, the Darlington Iron Works gave some details of the materials to be used and the processes involved (Brooke, 1999). First a 10" X 10" pile of bars was set up, the top and bottom bars being 'pure mine iron' and the interior bars puddled Yorkshire pig iron. The pile was hammered hot under a 5 ton steam hammer and 'wrought on all sides and upset in every direction'. The resultant mass was then hammered under a 6 ton hammer at welding temperature to form compact blooms, for rolling into


bars and then rails. Worn out or redundant rails (from both railways and tramways) are sometimes found in buildings, reused as lintels or in filler joist floors, for example. (c)

Deck beams

In 1844 James Kennedy and Thomas Vernon of Liverpool patented several forms of deck beam for use in the construction of ships (Gale, 1965). Descriptions included 'iron rolled in one piece having a flange on one edge projecting on one or both sides, and a rib or flange on the other edge, projecting on one or both sides'. Deck beams were used by Richard Turner of the Hammersmith Iron Works, Dublin, for the main ribs to the 1844-48 Palm House at Kew Gardens (Minter, 1990). ~h~ ribs, with a &bulb' lower flange, were rolled in relatively short lengths which were joined, presumably, by forge welding with the assistance of a Nasmyth steam hammer. Turner used deck beams in several other roofs. For the arched truss roof to Liverpool Lime Street Station, 9" deep deck beams in 24' lengths were joined together by riveted web and upper flange plates. Similar joint details were used for a bow-string roof of 70' span to a 700' 10% quayside transit shed in Glasgow, in which the radial strut members were of cast iron (see Illustration 73). (d)

Joists (with equalflanges)

The next development was the rolling of joist sections. William Fairbairn reported tests on three malleable (i.e. wrought) iron I-section deck beams in 1845, giving no information on how they were made (Fairbairn, 1849). With the making of rails a lucrative business, manufacturers probably had little incentive to diversify. Hoping to use wrought iron joists instead of cast iron in 'Fox & Barrett' flooring, Jarnes Barrett was obliged in the early 1850s to ask a manufacturer to make rolls especially for him (see Section 7.4.3). Through most of the second half of the nineteenth century and on into the twentieth century, imports of rolled structural sections from Europe were very significant, first iron and later, steel. In 1880, at least one British manufacturer, Bolckow, Vaughan & CO.,of Middlesborough, was rolling steel beams for about the same price as wrought iron, but 30% more expensive than Belgian beams (Kennedy, 1880).

6.3.2 Riveted sections - details and manufacture In the eighteenth century, boilers for Newcomen engines had been made by manually riveting together plates hammered out of wrought iron and rarely weighing more than 50 lbs each (Jenkins, 1918). In 1838, before Nasmyth's invention of the steam hammer, Mechanic's Magazine considered it truly exceptional that the Coalbrookdale Company could

Illustration 177 Edinburgh Post OfJice (1859) Riveted wrought iron girder; with timber cladding providing concealment andfire protection (see also Illustration 277) (Picture: Archives ' f

wrought iron plates of ] 0' -7" X 5' - 1" X 7/,6" thick. A ye, earlier, William Fairbairn had developed a riveting machine for use in boiler making by adapting a hole punching machine (Fairbairn, 1877). Although this gave a ten-fold increase in productivity, wrought iron sections formed by riveting together rolled angles and 'boiler plate' remained expensive in comparison with cast iron. Boiler plate girders were used in a number of Edinburgh buildings from the late 1850s (see Section 3.2.5 and Illustration 19) (Illustration 177). After about 1850, standard 'rules of thumb' were used increasingly in the design and detailing of joints. The combined cross sectional area of the rivets in a joint would be approximately equal to the cross sectional area of the plate left after punching or drilling the rivet holes. The rivet diameter would generally be 2 X the plate thickness for plates less than '12" thick. For thicker the plate plates, the rivet diameter would be about 1'12~ thickness (Rankine, 1869). For girders, the pitch of the rivets (or spacing between their centres) was commonly 3" or 4", or 5 X the rivet diameter, and not less than 2112 diameters (Rivington, 1876). The width of a rivet head is typically 1.5 or 1.6 times the diameter of the rivet. Mechanical riveting was faster and structurally superior to manual riveting.

6.3.3 Strength and assessment Generally, the stress values adopted for the assessment of beams are those adopted for the assessment of tension members (see Section 6.2.2). The yield stress for wrought iron is the same in tension and compression, but the permissible or allowable flexural compressive stress is reduced as necessary to prevent lateral-torsional buckling, in the same manner as for steel beams.


Illustration 176 ~ a siron t column top with a vertical boltingface and a seating projection for a bracket (Picture: I: Swailes)

Illustration I i9 Cast iron column top (other side) with horizontal bearing table (Picture: I: Swailes)

An architect might specify a rolled wrought iron joist by simply noting the depth required on a plan. Sometimes the breadth (of the flange) would be specified too. Iron joists would be bought by a builder from a merchant or stockholder, but engineers were scathing about the quality of such loosely specified 'builders ironwork' (Reade, 1890). However, joists were generally used in buildings as they came, straight from the rolls, any holes being drilled rather than punched. Under these circumstances, Professor Kennedy of University College, considered that harder and less tough material, of a kind not suitable for 'engineering structures', might be satisfactory (Kennedy, 1880).

be used for the assessment of wrought iron joists, unless tests confirm material toughness on a par with modern mild steel. Likewise, assessment should be based upon elastic rather than plastic methods of analysis. For the assessment of riveted wrought iron, the area of rivet holes should be deducted when determining tension flange stresses. Fatigue and fracture assessment of wrought iron bridges has been the subject of work in Germany over the past 25 years. Several papers are listed under the heading 'Modem testing and repair', in a reading list published by the Institution of Civil Engineers (Chrimes, 1994).

The satisfactory rolling of joists was more difficult than that of plates, bars, angles or tees. A metallurgical investigation of one of the first wrought iron I-beams rolled in the United States confirmed the inhomogeneous nature of the material and the presence of strength reducing defects (Elban, 1998). There was evidence to suggest that after rolling, supplementary material was added to form the flanges, resulting in a crack across one flange. Lack of toughness was also found in tests on wrought iron joists from the Royal Albert Hall (see Illustration 157). There has been one report in recent years of the brittle failure of a rolled wrought iron beam, in a building in Yorkshire. The beam was 10" to 12" in depth and of relatively short span. A sloping fracture towards one end suggested that shear played a part in the failure, which caused injuries to two men carrying out work on the building (Bland, 1984). Stress values based on sampling and testing should not

6.4

Cast iron columns and struts

6.4.1 Detaill, manufacture and defects

Circular hollow section columns with an outer diameter of up to about 300mm, as common in buildings, were normally cast horizontally. The earliest cast iron columns, little more than storey posts, are of cruciform or quatrefoil solid section. Later columns of small diameter may be solid, but were more often made hollow by the use of a core supported at the centre of the mould. A column core consisted of a tube or bar, wound with coarse rope, plastered over with wet moulding material, then oven-dried before use. The core required supports below at intervals along its length as well as supports above to prevent flotation on entry into the mould of the dense, molten iron. The position of the column mould joint is often clearly visible up the sides of a hollow circular cast iron column. Blowholes to one face may indicate the surface that was cast uppermost. Generally such


Gas pore at top as cast

v Illustration 180 Cast iron column cross-sections, showing defects: core eccentricity, voids and porosity (Picture: I: Swailes)

Illustration 181 Cast iron column cross-sections, showing defects (Picture: Joe Marsh, UMIST)

Illustration 182 The Grassmarket, Edinburgh (1875) A bent cast iron column supporting lintels over a shop front (Picture: I: Swailes)

defects have no structural significance. Requirements for features such as drive-shaft bolting faces often determined the orientation of the column in the mould (Illustrations 178 and 179). Movement of the core within the mould was common and most columns suffer from core eccentricity to a greater or lesser degree (Illustrations 180 and 181). This does not much affect load-carrying capacity (the cross-sectional area being unaffected), but wall thickness needs to be measured at several points around the circumference in order to determine an average for purposes of calculating cross-sectional area. This may be done via drilled holes or non-destructively, using ultrasonic measuring techniques. A small degree of curvature or lack of straightness arising from imperfect manufacture is quite normal, but where curvature is clearly visible, overload or accidental damage should be suspected (Illustration 182).


Illustration 185 Ingram Street, Glasgow (c.1854) Rear view of a facade retained for inclusion in a future development (Picture: I: Swailes) Illustration 183 Glasgow Green (probably c.1850) Shop front framing during demolition (Picture: Z Swailes)

Illustration 184 Ingram Street, Glasgow (c.1854) Front view of a fa~aderetained for inclusion in a future development (Picture: Z Swailes)

Illustration 186 Former Rail Store, Gidea Park, Essex (above) Internal view (below) Detail A 'historic repair', with a replacement column of light angle truss constructwnproviding vertical support to an overhead crane rail support beam. The badly-damaged hollow circular cast iron column was left in place, still supporting the roof (Picture: Morrison Construction)


, rrd Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Illustration 18; Dundee (1874)Fractured quayside column (Picture: I: Swailes)

Mid-nineteenth century shop fronts were often framed in cast iron. Exposed columns are usually circular, but concealed columns take a variety of forms (Illustrations 183 to 185). Hollow circular columns of very large diameter, or piers as used in railway bridge construction for example, were generally made in thinwalled sections. These would be cast vertically in loam moulds (formed using brickwork and without patterns) and joined via spigoted ends and1 or internal bolted flanges. Often such sections were filled with brickwork or rubble. Cracking may occur as a result of corrosion and expansion of fixings, or due to restrained thermal movements. Columns were vulnerable to impact damage where moving of heavy items by crane took place. Engineering workshops or foundries were generally served by overhead cranes, while dockside goods were handled by mobile rail-mounted cranes (Illustrations 186 and 187). Sometimes a problem will be immediately apparent, but columns in such positions should always be examined carefully for 'historic' damage. The large I-section columns of the great engineering workshops of the second half of the nineteenth century were moulded and cast in the same way as beams, often with holes in the web to reduce section weight. Their projecting flanges were generally left unprotected (see Illustrations 254 and 255).

lllustratron laa uomesrrc rrnrshing Mill, Anchor Mills, Paisley (1889) Cast iron columns split by ice. Several columns became filled with water due to a defective Jlat roofi The water in the columns froze over winter in the semi-derelict building, which was largely open to the elements. (Picture: Buro Happold)

In cast iron columns that have served as rainwater pipes, localised internal corrosion may be severe, and its extent difficult to determine. Where columns are not sealed, they may become filled with water, which then has nowhere to drain. To find water in hollow columns is by no means unusual. Vertical splits were found in a significant number of columns when structural engineers inspected the derelict Domestic Finishing Mill at Anchor Mills in Paisley (Illustration 188). Drilling holes in other columns to determine wall thickness, they were found to be partially filled with water, drained from the defective roof. The building was largely open to the elements over winter, and it appeared that water in the columns had turned to ice. Splitting had been caused by the expansion associated with freezing. One nineteenth century report has been found of a cast iron column 'exploding' as the result of ice formation within. More recently, the problem has caused the splitting of the hollow tubular legs of steel towers.

6.4.2 Strength and assessment The load capacity of cast iron columns and struts is generally estimated using the Gordon-Rankine formula. Lewis Gordon, W J M Rankine's predecessor as Professor at Glasgow University, devised the


formula as a semi-empirical fit to the results of a remarkable series of experiments by Eaton Hodgkinson (Illustrations 189 to 191). Rankine generalised the formula by expressing slenderness in terms of effective length and radius of gyration. For assessment purposes, the BD21 version of the formula includes a factor of safety of 5. Where load is applied eccentrically, a check of bending stresses is made, although arguably a factor of safety as large as 5 gives some allowance for nominal eccentricity.

cut slits either side of the hole, then the blade was ground as thin as possible and used to extend the slits to simulate a crack (Illustration 194). The column was then loaded to failure. Column 2 was tested in two stages, the second stage involving loading to failure with an eccentricity at both ends of 50mm (Illustration 195).

Recently, Historic Scotland has supported research at UMIST to extend the work that Hodgkinson began over 160 years ago. Several hollow circular column sections from outbuildings at Stanley Mills became available for testing after a fire. The longitudinal profile and cross-sectional details of each slightly tapered column was measured with great care (Illustration 192). Nominally they were of 5" outside diameter.

Using the Gordon-Rankine formula, with a factor of safety of 5, gives an approximate working load for the test columns of 100 kN. Numerical elastic analyses were carried out for each column, allowing for the Pdelta (large displacement) effect. A reasonable fit was found between the experimental and theoretical results, except for the large eccentricity test on Column 2. In this case, part of the column section was subject to bending tensile stresses from the start of the test over the length of the column. A better theoretical result requires account to be taken of the non-linear material behaviour of cast iron in tension.

The test on pin-ended Column 1 was carried out in three stages (Illustration 193). With an initial unloaded curvature giving a maximum lateral offset W of 7mm, the column was loaded concentrically to 620 kN. After unloading, the column was displaced laterally in the testing frame at both ends to give an eccentricity of lOmm, its curvature also having increased through plastic deformation to W = 9.5mm. After a second cycle of loading and unloading, a hole was drilled in the tension face of the column at the point of maximum lateral offset W. A normal hacksaw blade was used to

In practice, finite element analysis will be useful in the assessment of cast iron columns only if their end conditions and the eccentricity of load are known, or can be determined by site testing. Research is continuing into this area of uncertainty. Nineteenth century practice in column design was by no means uniform with a variety of design methods used, and with factors of safety varying from 4 to 10. In 1904, the Darlington Apartments in New York collapsed at a late stage in construction. Afterwards, cast iron columns were not trusted for high-rise construction in

Illustration 189 Eaton Hodgkinson's tests on cast iron pillars [Test arrangement] (Source: Swailes, 2004)


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Illustration 190 Eaton Hodgkinson's tests on cast iron pillars. Fractures of hollow pillars (Source: Swailes, 2004)


the USA, and factors of safety for use in assessment were increased (Illustration 196) (Swailes, 1997). It seems very likely that the ripples of alarm crossing the Atlantic Ocean led to the introduction of conservative assessment methods by the London County Council (General Powers) Act, 1909. The LCC Building Act Committee at the time certainly made a study of the American codes (GLC, 1976). Structural framing details of the Darlington Apartments were deficient in that projecting bearings for steel beams resulted in large eccentricities of load on the cast iron columns (Friedman, 1995). Temporary lateral stability bracing was also inadequate. Reference has been made in Section 6.4.1 to 'historical damage' suffered by cast iron columns. In more recent times, numerous examples of roof collapse due to fracture of a supporting cast iron column by a fork-lift truck have been recorded (Lovejoy, 1988). Small diameter columns in low-rise buildings such as mill weaving sheds are particularly vulnerable. Guidance on minimising the risks has been issued by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE, 1999). The solutions are to remove the powered vehicle hazard, to protect the columns by barriers or suitable encasement, or to provide steel or ductile (SG) cast iron replacements with adequate impact resistance in vulnerable locations.

6.5

8

0

50

1W

Flat Ended Bars

150

200

250

Slenderness ratio LJr

Ill~tstrationI91 Experimental and theoretical strut buckling curves (Source: Swailes, 2004)

Cast iron beams

6.5.1 Details, manufacture and defects Early in the nineteenth century beams might be cast directly from the blast furnace. Later practice was to re-melt the pig iron in a secondary furnace, or cupola, giving more control over the operation and a better quality end product (Swailes, 1996). The choice of raw materials was sometimes made by an engineer, but for building works was often left to the experience of the ironfounder.

CROSS SECTlONAl

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Illustration 192 Typical section property variations for a test column from Stanley Mills (Source: Swailes, 2004)

A re-usable wooden replica or pattern of the beam was made, very slightly oversize to allow for shrinkage of the iron on cooling. I-section beams were most often cast with their webs horizontal (Illustrations 197 to 203). The lower part of the mould for large beams would be formed directly in a deep layer of sand in the foundry floor. The upper part of the mould would be made in one, two or three mould boxes, and would normally be air-dried and then fitted in place over the lower part of the mould prior to casting.

A clayey sand mixture was used for moulding, compacted in layers, but not so densely as to prevent the escape of gases generated due to the damp nature of the 'green sand' mould. The 'ventilation' of the mould was an important element of the moulders craft as

0

20

40 60 80 Lateral deflection (mm)

100

Illustration 193 Test results for Column I (Source: Swailes, 2004)


Illustration 196 Historic cast iron column design curves (Source: Swailes and Marsh, 1998)

Illustration 194 Details of artificial defects in the convex face of Column I (Picture: T Swailes)

0 low 2Mm Tensile strains

Lateral deflection (mm)

Illustration 195 Test results for Column 2 (Source: Swailes, 2004)

-

(~10") Case 2

without it excessive blowholes would be the result. For light, decorative castings, a relatively open-textured sharp sand was favoured for its self-venting properties. For structural beams and columns, a closer textured moulding sand was necessary to resist the greater pressures from the molten iron and the effects of intense heat over a longer period. A piece of wire was pushed through the moulding sand at approximately 6" intervals to promote ventilation. Mould finishes varied, with special facing sands used, sometimes coated by brush with a coal dust based 'blacking' that would bum off and result in a smoother surface finish to the casting. Holes in beams, for tie bar fixings for example, were usually formed by the use of separate oven-dried 'core' moulds. hfabricated iron frames were often very carefully thought out. Beam to column connections depending on relatively sophisticated beam end details that demanded skilled work in the foundry (Illustrations 198 & 199). The detrimental effects of rapid cooling on the end product were appreciated and heavy castings were sometimes left in the sand for a day or more. Giving evidence after the collapse of a mill in Oldham in 1844, William Fairbaim gave 10 hours as the minimum period for which 'fireproof' beams should remain in the sand after they are cast. However, Joseph Whitworth (of screw thread fame) said that some small foundries removed castings red-hot from the sand, to


Illustration 197 Large I-section columns from a c. 1855 Engineering Workshop at Chatham Dockyard Fracture after testing in bending, with compression zone wedge (Picture: Z Swailes)

Illustration 198 Havelock Cotton Mill, Manchester (c.1845) Ends of cast iron beams saved for testing (Picture: T Swailes)

Illustration 199 Havelock Cotton Mill, Manchester (c.1845) Iron framing exposed during demolition in 1995 (Picture: Joe Marsh, UMIST)


save time, space and money (Royal Commission, 1845). Quality control in other aspects of foundry work was equally variable and, unfortunately, a good surface finish is no guarantee of a good beam. A variety of qualitative tests for the soundness of castings were used, a writer in Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine in 1830 recommending that the edge of the casting be tried with a hammer: 'If fragments fly off, and no sensible indentation be made, the iron will be hard and brittle'. Minor flaws which may be seen in most fractures and sometimes on the surface of a casting have little effect on the static or fatigue strength of a beam, given the relatively low notch sensitivity of the material. Most common are roughly spherical holes that may be lOmm or more in diameter just below the surface of the iron, or breaking the surface as 'blowholes', formed by gas bubbles which rise upwards within the mould. Potentially serious flaws include contamination of the iron by moulding sand, or 'cold joints', produced by an interrupted flow of the molten metal (Illustration 205). Practice in proof testing beams in an effort to detect serious weakness varied, as did the loads to which beams were proved. In some cases every beam was proof tested to its working load and in other cases only one typical beam was tested to destruction to prove the adequacy of its design.

6.5.2 The evolution of different forms of beam Cast iron was first introduced as a material for beams in industrial buildings at the end of the eighteenth century because, unlike timber, it is incombustible. The northern part of Houldsworth's cotton mill in Glasgow, now demolished, was one of the earliest 'fireproof' buildings in Scotland, built in 1804-5. Brick arches sprang from the bottom flanges of inverted tee section cast iron beams of 12' 6" span and spaced 8' 6" apart (Illustration200) (Hay, 1986). Very early cast iron beams tend to have a narrow, parallel sided bottom flange, around 4" wide. The span of the beams determined the number and spacing of columns across the width of a building but was limited in 'fireproof' construction by the great weight of the floor. However, greater column spacings were needed as cotton mills were designed to accommodate increasingly large spinning mules. By 1825, William Fairbairn was testing inverted tee section beams of around 21' span for use in a Bradford mill (Fairbairn, 1870). In 1827, he provided experimental facilities for fellow Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society member, Eaton Hodgkinson. The collaboration between the two men proved to be a great success, resulting in the 'Hodgkinson Beam' (Hodgkinson, 1831). Surprisingly, the new form of

beam was first used in a railway bridge. George Stephenson was a friend of William Fairbairn and obtained from him Hodgkinson beams of almost 25' span for a level girder bridge to carry the Liverpool and Manchester Railway over Water Street in Manchester (Fitzgerald, 1980). By the 1840s the 'Hodgkinson beam', with its small top flange and larger bottom flange, was widely used for railway bridges and preferred in fireproof mill construction. Design for a given span and load was straightforward using the 'Hodgkinson formula'. The cross-section of later cast iron beams very often varies along their length, with the bottom flange becoming slightly narrower towards the supports (Illustrations 201 to 203). Cast iron beams of large size were used by the architects of many of the great houses, public buildings and palaces of early nineteenth century Georgian England. In such buildings, structural ironwork is generally concealed and the only Scottish examples so far identified date from the Victorian era. Large inverted tee sections were designed by John Nash in the 1820s for use in Buckingham Palace. Most other architects, including Robert Smirke, Jeffrey Wyattville and Charles Barry, left the design and proving of cast iron beams to a structural ironwork subcontractor. The engineer and ironfounder J U Rastrick designed and load tested cast iron beams of unprecedented span for Robert Smirke's British Museum (Slade, 1995). These were a prototype for similar beams used some 20 years later by William Nixon at St. Andrew's University (see Illustration 92). Builders and architects often favoured the 'Tredgold beam', designed according to principles set down by Thomas Tredgold in a 'Practical essay on the strength of cast iron and other metals' first published in 1822. Tredgold beams have top and bottom flanges of the same size. The derivation of Tredgold beam design tables was based on the bending strength of small bars and, for beams, the tables give an inadequate factor of safety against failure (Sutherland, 1980). 6.5.3 Strertgtlz and assessment Twentieth century engineers have been concerned with the assessment of beams in existing construction, rather than with the design of new cast iron beams. In simple terms this involves calculation of the elastic bending stresses in a beam under its working loads and comparison of the tensile stress value with the safe working stress, or the permissible stress, of the material. Design tensile stresses are considered in Section 5.3.3 (b). Only in unusual cases will shear or bearing stresses govern, although the stability of a laterally unsupported web or compression flange is sometimes an issue.


T R A N S Y E R S C & L A M SLCTIOW

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Illustration 200 Houldsworth S Cotton Mill, Glasgow (c.1804) Beam and framing details (Picture: RCAHMS in Hay & Stell, 1986)

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South Mills, Dundee (1864) A Hodgkinson type beam over a partially demolishedfireproof basement

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Between 1935 and 1944 tests were carried out to investigate the ability of cast iron girder highway bridges to carry heavy military vehicles (Chettoe, 1944). Analysis of the then available results of breaking tests on full-size cast iron bridge beams showed that Hodgkinson's formula, derived from tests on small beams, gave an over-estimate of minimum likely strength. A graphical plot of the available test data provided a basis for obtaining a lower bound value for the strength of a cast iron beam (Illustration 204). The average modulus of rupture for bridge beams removed for testing was 8 tons/in2(124 N/mmz) This value was taken as confirmation of the 'wartime' permissible bending tensile stress of 2.5 tons/inz (39N/mm2)in use in the 1940s for the assessment of such bridges.

(1864) A cast iron I11ustration 202 South Mill, Dur; column on a large cast iron bus,, ...so supporting a ground floor beam (Picture: RCAHMS)

Illustration 203 South Mill, Dundee (c.1851, date of this building 1864) A cast iron beam with a hog-backed profile (Picture:RCAHMS) Note the small bulb-shaped top flange and the dovetail on the beam end, to slot into a recess in the cast iron base of Illustration 32

Tests on complete bridges showed that bridge beams were stiffened considerably by the material encasing them. In estimating live load stresses it was recommended that the section modulus of the beam should be factored by the ratio D/d, where D is the overall depth of the bridge deck and d is the mid-span depth of the beam. A typical value for D/d in a girder bridge is 2, although there is an upper limit for assessment, so the enhancement of strength due to composite action is considerable. In most forms of deck, the effects of a concentrated wheel load were spread across several beams and load distribution coefficients were provided to enable this load-sharing to be taken into account in an assessment. Tests on a bridge by the Transport and Road Research Laboratory in 1991 confirmed that guidance in the Department of Transport standard relating to cast iron girder bridges, largely based on the results of the wartime tests, was reasonable (Daly, 1991). The fatigue strength of cast iron bridges is at present the subject of research by the author. The BD21 permissible stresses for cast iron are presented in the form of envelopes, both for direct stresses and for shear, in the Steel Construction Institute guide 'Appraisal of existing iron and steel structures' (Bussell, 1997). Reduction in permissible stress is required as the proportion of live load increases. In the SCI publication it is suggested that, with sampling and testing of the cast iron, it may be possible to justify the use of a higher permissible stress than that recommended in BD21. However, it is also noted that, particularly where only a small number of samples can be taken, this approach may not achieve the desired result. Tensile test results for samples need to be interpreted carefully. There is often a marked difference between the tensile strength of a small sample and 'the modulus of rupture' of the beam from which the sample is taken. This difference may be explained in terms of 'size


Illustration 204 Bridge beam strength data (Source: Chettoe, 1944) (Picture: Institution of Civil Engineers)

effects', which are a feature of brittle materials (Parmenter, 1996). The results of tests to failure on cast iron beams give a good indication of the range of strengths to be found in nominally identical sections (Swailes, 1998) (Illustration 205). In 1909, at a time when cast iron beams were little used, the London County Council (General Powers) Act introduced a very conservative permissible tensile stress for cast iron of 1.5 tonslin' (23 N/mrn2) (GLC, 1976). Reasons for mistrust of cast iron at the start of the twentieth century are considered in 6.4.2. This mistrust was perpetuated by the publication by the British Constructional Steelwork Association of a handbook principally concerned with steelwork in building refurbishment (Bates, 1984). A permissible tensile stress of 18.5N/mm2 was recommended for the assessment of cast iron beams made before 1900. No strong arguments have been presented for assessing cast iron beams in buildings against different

permissible stresses than are used for bridge beams, and the general use of BD21 stresses is becoming accepted. A recent collapse has highlighted the need to examine very carefully cast iron beam and brickwork arch construction supporting external paving or roofs. In August 2002, part of an 1838 roof terrace collapsed at Hyde Park Gardens in London (Arnold, 2002). Dead loads had increased considerably since the time of construction with successive resurfacing of the terrace, and water penetration had caused some corrosion of a supporting cast iron beam. Water may also have reduced 'the structural contribution' of the lime concrete fill over the arches. The beam fractured without warning, and it and the supported arches fell into an unoccupied room. The nineteenth century collapse of the roof terrace over the dining room to King's College, London, was in many ways similar to this more recent accident (Swailes, 2003).


Illustration 205 Cast iron beam and joist test results with selectedfiacture details (Source: Swailes & Marsh, 1998) (Picture: Thomas Teyord Ltd)


BUILDING STRUCTURES

7.1

Introduction

This section considers the resistance of iron-framed buildings to loads arising from normal use, to accidental damage, and to the effects of fire. The emphasis is on a qualitative understanding of 'whole structure behaviour', rather than on structural analysis. For example, where and how do wind forces act on a building and how are they transferred through it to the foundations or supports? Lessons from history are also considered.

7.2

Resistance to vertical a n d lateral loads

7.2.1 Roofs and single storey buildings Increased dead weight may need to be catered for when a roof covering is renewed or refurbished. Thermal insulation was not important in most buildings with iron roofs and simple coverings were perfectly adequate. A variety of coverings of different weights and with different forms of supporting structure were used in the nineteenth century. The resistance of iron framed roofs to wind forces may be difficult to prove by structural calculations, although adequacy on the basis of past performance may not be in doubt. Appreciation of the effect of wind on iron roofs by their designers did not include an understanding of uplift effects. The effect of the wind was generally believed to be a downward pressure, normal to the roof slope (Unwin, 1869). Roof supports were often not anchored down to the structure below. Tying down to prevent wind uplift and allowance for stress reversal in roof elements may be necessary if roof dead loads are reduced.

destroyed the open platform roof to the Manchester Exhibition Railway Station in 1857, a wind pressure of 33 Ibs/ft2 (1.58 kN/m2) was recorded at Greenwich Observatory in London. The original Haymarket Station train shed was moved from Edinburgh to a more exposed site at Bo'ness. Additional steel cantilever columns placed beside the cast iron columns to the one side of the building cater for the stronger side winds. For wind blowing end-on to the shed, additional steel bracing members were provided both in the roof plane and between the end bay columns to the sides (Illustrations 206 and 207). Dockyard transit sheds similar in cross-section to the Haymarket Railway Station train shed were probably less vulnerable to wind damage as their doors could be closed during severe storms. Structural engineering calculations may indicate that such structures have inadequate resistance to crosswinds, contrary to the evidence of satisfactory performance over many years. However, where refurbishment provides an opportunity to introduce additional bracing in a discreet manner, it may be acceptable (Illustration 208).

The Linthouse Engine Shop, now at the Irvine Maritime Museum, is well thought out in structural terms. Massive cast iron I-section stanchions with large bases are a characteristic feature of this type of building. They support heavy loads from overhead travelling cranes and also provide lateral stability in the plane of the structural framing (Illustrations 209 and 210). Buildings that followed the pattern established for the Great Exhibition of 1851 also have a central hall, but with two-storey galleried side aisles. Knee braces are used extensively in the framing of Glasgow's Old Fruitmarket to stiffen the beam-column Following Thomas Tredgold's advice, practice for joints in both the transverse and longitudinal directions major roofs designed by engineers after the mid-1820s (see Illustrations 13 and 14). Where stability is had been to allow a vertical load of 35 Ibs/ft2 provided by portal frame action, avoiding diagonal (1.68 kN/m2), with another 5 lbs/ft2 (0.24 kN/mZ)for cross-bracing, realistic modelling of the joints for snow. Trial ribs for Richard Turner's Liverpool Lime assessment by structural calculation is likely to be Street roof and Fox, Henderson & Co.'s Birmingham rather difficult. New Street Station roof were test loaded uniformly with 40 Ibs/ft2 (1.92 kN/m2) and also asymmetrically, In the light, curvilinear forms of iron-framed with the test load applied to one half only. The roof to conservatories and glasshouses, arch and dome forms the Bricklayers Arms Railway Station was similarly predominate, with various means adopted to prevent tested, but fell as the result of accidental damage to a spreading at the eaves. The simplest form is a Gothic supporting column rather than as the result of arch. With the apex unsupported, under vertical loads overloading (G. Mitchell, 2001). When a storm there will be an outward thrust at the feet of the glazing


bars or astragals. To some extent the tendency to spread at the eaves may be reduced by the in-plane stiffness of the glazed upper roof slope, with the glazing bars and glazing acting compositely as a plate or stiff sheet. When adequate support is provided at the apex, as in the conservatory at Skelmorlie Castle, the tendency to spread is reduced (Illustrations 21 1 to 213). A simpler case still is a half-arch or lean-to conservatory, built against a house or garden wall. A structural appraisal in such a case must also include the building or wall on which the conservatory depends, particularly if the conservatory is to be removed, perhaps with a view to permanent relocation. Under different circumstances, a lean-to might either act beneficially as a prop to a supporting wall or detrimentally by tending to push it over (Illustrations 214 to 216).

Illustration 206 Haymarket Station Train Shed, Bo'ness Heritage Area, Falkirk (1840) Cantilever steel columns attached to the existing frame at eaves level cater for higher side wind forces than in Edinburgh (Picture: Z Swailes)

Eaves spread may be resisted by tying or trussing, though such arrangements may sometimes appear to be more decorative than structurally efficient. A good example is the passage linking the Kingsknowe Hotel to its conservatory (Illustrations 217 to 220). Domes usually have a perimeter tie or ring beam that prevents eaves spread. Bar or angle iron purlins, supported on principal ribs, may serve as ring ties at higher level. The main dome to Glasgow's Kibble Palace has a series of concentrically placed tie bars between the glazing bars, up the roof slope (see Illustrations 143 and 153). Lateral stability may be enhanced in rather complex ways by abutting structures or decorative features (Illustrations 221 and 222). Diagonal or cross bracing, of the type used in the lightweight roofs and side bays of modern lightweight steel framed buildings, is rare in traditional conservatories. Instead, forces due to wind pressures are transferred to supports in a complex way through

Illustration 207 Haymarket Station Train Shed, Bo'ness Heritage Area, Falkirk (1840)Diagonal bracing to cater for higher longitudinal wind forces (Picture: 'I: Swailes)

Illustration 208 Dockyard Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Dundee (1874) Braced iron frames are visible at intervals along the length of the building. They support a horizontal structural steelwork wind girder at ceiling level, providing a calculable level of safety. (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)


the in-plane resistance of the glazed surfaces. The glass should be removed from a large conservatory which is out of use or becoming derelict, where falling glass is a danger to passers-by. All glass removed should be kept safe until such time as it can be re-used. Temporary bracing may be needed to ensure the stability of the bare iron frame. A structure weakened by partial removal or loss of glazing can offer considerable resistance to the wind and be susceptible to storm damage. (Illustration 223).

7.2.2 MuWstorey buildings

Illustration 209 Linthouse Marine Engine Works, Scottish Maritime Museum, Irvine (1872) Internal view in 1990, prior to relocation. Relocated from Alexander Stephen's yard on the Clyde in the early 1990s. Thmugh portal frame type action, side aisles help the tall structure withstand cross winds. Occasional column bays are cross-braced in the longitudinal direction. These braced bays transfer wind forces normal to the gables to foundation level, as the I-section stanchions would be unable to do so as cantileve~ bending about their weaker axis. (Source: The Scottish Maritime Museum)

Illustration 210 Linthouse Marine Engine Works, Scottish Maritime Museum, Irvine (1872) Cast iron stanchion detail (Picture: T. Swailes)

The modern steel framed office building is a descendant of the multi-storey iron framed industrial buildings of the late eighteenth century. In a simple steel framed building, vertical and lateral forces due to self-weight, imposed and wind loads are transferred from the roof, floors and external cladding to an independent steel frame. Vertical loads pass from the beams to the columns and then down to the foundations. A bracing system resists lateral loads and also provides stability by holding in position the ends of the main framing members. The bracing may be either a system of steel diagonal members or cross ties, or masonry or concrete walls and shafts (Illustration 224). Wind loads acting on the external faces of a steel framed building are generally transferred to the bracing system via the floors, which act as stiff plates or diaphragms loaded in their plane. In buildings of traditional construction with timber floors, diaphragm action depends to a large extent on the floor covering. The connections of the floors to the fa~adeand bracing walls are also important. A rare example of a building with diagonal bracing in the floors is Gardner's furniture store in Jamaica Street, Glasgow, built in 1855-6 (Illustration 225). On plan, the building is approximately a rectangle with glazed and iron-framed elevations to two adjacent sides. Timber floor joists are supported on a combination of cast iron beams and 'McConnel patent beams' (see Illustration 90 and section 3.2.5). Diagonal bracing within the floor depth takes the form of a further series of McConnel beams, restraining the iron framed fagades and fixed to the interior columns with wrought iron straps. The floors of this building carry loads in a complex way and any calculations for the McConnel beams without some form of confirmatory load testing would be very speculative. There are differences in the form of multi-storey textile mills and warehouses. To admit natural light to work by, the mills of the mid-nineteenth century are often quite narrow, with large windows between substantial piers of brickwork or stone masonry. In comparison, warehouses tend to be wider with fairly low ceilings


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Illustration 211 Skelmorlie Castle, Lurgs: garden conservaton (c. 1860) External view (front)(Pict~~re: 7: Su9ailes)

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Ill~r.strtrtio~~ 214 Frrirj?firl(lHo1r.c.r c~r~rr.sc~r-~~crtor:\: Dtrlkrifli (c. 183.5) Grrrr~.rrl1.ic.11: ~ ~ r - i to o r .re.storurtior~ (Pic.tlrr.z,:Hrr.irtrge Errgi~rc,c,r.irlg, Tllo 111tlir.str-itrlHer-itcrgc. Cot~ll>trrr~ Lttl. )

~llustration2 15 Fairfield House conservatorv, .. Dalkeith (c.1835) Ironwork detail, prior to restoration (Picture: Heritage Engineering, The Industrial Heritage Company Ltd)

Illustration 21 7 Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (I,,,): Conservatory Link passage to the hotel (Picture: T. Swailes)

and stronger floors. Floor beams usually bear in walls or piers on a stone pad, even where the supporting masonry is brickwork. Particularly in cast iron framed mills, the beams are normally well built in to the external wall piers and tests have shown that this gives a 'partially fixed' end condition. (Swailes, 1988) Cast iron columns generally provide internal support to floors. Timber beams may be continuous over or 'through' columns, but scarf joints (with limited moment capacity) between lengths of timber may prevent the achievement of full structural continuity.

Illustration 216 Fairfield House conservatory, Dalkeith (C. 1835) After restoration (Picture: I: Swailes)

It seems likely that two types of structural action combine to resist cross winds blowing on a tall, long and narrow iron framed textile mill building. Often there will be no internal walls to act as bracing. Firstly, a proportion of the load due to wind pressures on the long elevations of the building may be transferred by the floors spanning horizontally as stiff plates between


Illustration 218 Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (1868): Conservatory Imnwork details (Picture: I: Swailes)

the gable walls. The remainder of the load on each bay width may be carried by 'frame action', with the heavy masonry piers between the windows acting as the outer column members of a transverse frame, together with the floor beams and the internal cast iron columns. That frame action is a reality has been proven by site tests.

7.3

Resistance to disproportionate collapse

7.3.1 Background 'Failures in construction often teach more than successes, inasmuch as experiences, dearly bought, leave an indelible impression, and open our eyes to circumstances not before perceived' (Nash, 1867).

A distinction was drawn between stability and robustness in section 4.3. A specified level of robustness (or resistance to 'disproportionate collapse') became a requirement in the construction of new buildings of 5 storeys or more after the partial collapse of a 23-storey block of flats at Ronan Point in London (Griffiths, 1968). An unexceptional gas explosion in the kitchen of an eighteenth floor corner flat blew out an external load-bearing flank wall, the

structure comprising prefabricated concrete floor and wall panels on the Danish Larsen Nielsen system. The flank walls and floors above collapsed in turn, and the weight and impact of the falling concrete panels caused the corner of the building to collapse down to first floor level. Four people were killed. Mandatory Standard 1.2 of the Scottish Building Standards states: 'every building must be designed and constructed in such a way that in the event of damage occurring to any part of the structure of the building the extent of any resultant collapse will not be disproportionate to the original cause'. For requirements relating to the provision of ties and design against misuse or accident, reference is made in The Building Technical Handbooks Technical Standards to British Standards BS8110 (reinforced, prestressed or plain concrete), BS5950 (structural steelwork) and BS5628 (structural masonry). Formerly, Building Regulations also required that resistance to disproportionate collapse be considered for roof or other structures spanning 9m or more over public spaces. The safety of a large roof under which a large crowd of people may gather is clearly more critical than for a construction of more modest scale.


Illustration 219 Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (1868): Conservatory bxternal vlew (Picture: I . bwarles)

Illustration 220 Kingsknowe Hotel, Galashiels (1868): Conservatory Internal view of the dome (Picture: 7: Swailes)


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7.3.2 Multi-storey buildings The disproportionate collapse requirements of the Building Regulations may not at present need to be considered for every mill, factory, or warehouse refurbishment project. One of the deciding factors is the category of use for which a building is to be adapted. The local authority building control authority should be consulted to determine the extent to which the requirements of the Technical Standards apply in any particular case. Multi-storey buildings of traditional construction have a good safety record and, when cared for properly, they provide safe places in which to live and work. Often when robustness is an issue, structural calculations that are based upon codes of practice and other authoritative guidance applicable to modern structures will be inappropriate. In accordance with the advice given in the British Standard guide to the principles of the conservation of historic buildings, 'it will be necessary to follow professional experience and judgement, on the basis of what has been proved to work' (BS 7913, 1988). Robustness can be improved, for example, by the provision of better horizontal tying within the floors of a building or by the protection of vertical supports that may be vulnerable to damage. The improvement achieved by such measures may not be quantifiable, but can often be gained at relatively little cost during a refurbishment project.

The seriousness of a structural failure increases with the size of the building, as demonstrated in a shocking manner by the progressive collapse in September 2001 of the twin World Trade Center towers in New York. Collapses among the first generation of American multi-storey buildings led to a distrust of cast iron columns, which with hindsight was rather misplaced. In 1860, a five-storey cotton mill in Massachusetts collapsed while 700 people were at work. The building was not of fireproof construction and a fire started in the ruins, resulting in 88 deaths (Wermiel, 1995). Although the finger of blame was pointed at 'outrageously defective' cast iron columns, the collapse was due to a combination of several factors. In 1904 a high-rise New York apartment block collapsed when construction reached the eleventh storey, killing 25 workers. Steel beams were supported by cast iron columns via eccentric brackets, with construction bracing not provided (Friedman, 1995). All buildings are at their most vulnerable when in an incomplete state, either during construction or refurbishment, or as the result of damage caused by fire, accident, or neglect. Iron-framed 'fireproof' buildings with cast iron beam and brick arch floors have been prone to catastrophic collapse under these circumstances. Examination of brief details of some recorded accidents, including some Scottish examples, is instructive. The large number of fatalities in

The derelict structure before renovation, with glazing removed and security,fencing in place to disco~~rage ~~nn~~thorised access to the building. (Picture: 7: Svvailes)


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Illustration 224 Building bracing systems (Source: IStructE, 1988) (Picture: The Institution of Structural Engineers)

centurymill collapses was a consequence of the practice of occupying lower floors before the construction of the floors above was complete. Very many buildings of this kind have been adapted with great success for new uses, but their refurbishment must always be carried out with approp,..ate skill and

Brickwork floor arches are very strong if undisturbed, but very heavy. The collapse of an upper floor arch onto to the floor below would be quite likely to cause the collapse of that floor in turn, possibly through failure of the supporting beams. Arches are sensitive to lateral movement of their supports and to loss of mortar from the brickwork joints. The comparative superiority of 'filler joist' floors was demonstrated recently in the partial collapse of a fireproof former textile mill in Hull. Several arched lower floor bays had been replaced with filler joist construction many years prior to the collapse. None of the replacement floor bays failed, the filler joist floor proving able to support the weight of three collapsed brickwork arch floors from above. In the mid-1990s, a six-storey fireproof textile mill dating from 1865-66 was refurbished to accommodate the University of Huddersfield's School of Computing a"d Mathematics (Bussell, '998). The floors, with brick arches supported on cast iron beams, were strengthened by replacing the original covering to the arches with a continuous slab of lightweight concrete, reinforced with steel mesh (Illustration 226).

Illusrration 2 A. Gardner & Sons Furniture Warehouse,Jamaica Street, Glasgow (1855)(Pict T. Swailes) the structure beneath thefloorboards. In some 'secondary'McConne1beam, web blocks of timber Interior view, 3,~~wing (withface grain vertical) were used instead of cast iron, this variant being provided for in the patent.


Cast iron columns in multi-storey buildings of all types are nearly always discontinuous, with simple spigot joints at each floor level. The failure of a lower storey column or its foundation is therefore likely to cause quite extensive collapse unless the floors are capable of bridging over the lost support. In 1995, a test was carried out to investigate the effect of the removal of a basement level column in a mid-nineteenth century fireproof cotton mill in Manchester (Swailes, 1997). Although bridging action within the floors was found to be considerable, it was not enough to compensate for Ammbk CI

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the removal of the column. One solution is to provide a lightweight concrete topping to the arches, increasing the effective structural depth of the floor so that locally it can arch over two bays without intermediate support (Swailes, 1998). Deep, stiff floors of this type are relatively brittle compression structures, lacking the flexibility and ductility of modem steel and reinforced concrete floors and frames that enables bridging by catenary action. Where bridging over a lost supporting element is not possible, that element may need to be protected or uqrwriOII

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Illustration 226 Firth Street Mill, Huddersfield, England (1865-6) Sections through the floor (a) as found (b) afrer strengthening. Reinforcing bars were resin-anchored into the supporting external stone walls before the concrete was placed to enhance the hogging moment resistance at the built-in beam ends. These 'invisible' strengthening works also added to the robustness of the building, effectively tying it together horizontally at eachfloor level in the longitudinal and transverse directions. (Source: Bussell and Robinson, 1998) (Picture: The Structural Engineer)

Illustration 227 Weensland Mill, Hawick (1850)Afrer partial demolition of the remains of the burnt out m wall bridges over two fallen supporting columns (Picture: T. Swailes)

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strengthened. For example, a vulnerable column in a ground floor level car park might either be protected by crash barriers, or encased in reinforced concrete to provide impact resistance. Masonry walls do have a remarkable ability to arch over lost vertical supports (Illustration 227).

7.3.3 Roofs One-way spanning iron roofs lack redundancy and the consequences of the failure of a support or of a critical element to a long span are likely to be serious. Prior to the introduction of raised platforms at stations, numerous roof collapses were caused by the loss of a supporting cast iron column, struck by de-railed rolling stock (Mitchell, 2001). The vulnerability of cast iron columns to impact damage is considered in section 6.4.1.

A tragic progressive collapse occurred at Charing Cross Station in 1905. During re-glazing of the 40 year old roof, several roof bays and the gable screen fell. This caused a wall to fall on adjacent property, killing 6 people. The accident was blamed on a defective threaded end to one of the principal wrought iron tie bars (Jackson, 1969). Some accidents resulted from misuse of a building. Twelve people died in 1828

when the cast iron roof to the Brunswick Theatre collapsed during a rehearsal (Mechanic's Magazine, 1828). It was overloaded with heavy machinery and the supporting walls were considered too slender. 7.4

Floor systems and their structural behaviour

7.4.1 Arch and beam floors Where cast iron beams support brick arches in a fireproof floor, the dead load stresses are considerable. Even allowing for end fixity, the load capacity of the beams will be limited due to the low tensile strength of the cast iron. The effective beam stiffness (EI) obtained by considering the brickwork and cast iron to act compositely is about 1.5 times that for the cast iron beam alone. However, because most of the arch material is above the cast iron beam neutral axis, the increase in strength is negligible. Strengthening may be achieved by removal of the material over the arches and replacement with a lightweight reinforced concrete topping to obtain a composite concrete and cast iron beam (Rhodes, 1987). The Institution of Civil Engineers Design and Practice Guide 'Structural appraisal of iron framed textile mills' includes a worked example (Swailes, 1998)

Illustration 228 Sttvngthening solutions for fireproof textile mills (Source: Swailes & Marsh. 1998) (Picture: Thornas Telford Ltd)


Illustration 229 Iron-framing to fireproof flooring (Source: Fairbaim, 1870) Turned through ninety degrees, the end bay arches [form a strong and powerful resisting abutment to the thrust of the transverse arches running from one end of the building to the other'.

(Illustration 228). Some of the floor dead weight may be carried by composite action if the beams are backpropped prior to placement of the concrete. To some extent the brickwork may be self-supporting between the columns by three-dimensional vaulting action. In an arched floor the internal arch bays are mutually supporting. The thrust from the end bays is resisted either by a substantial solid masonry external wall (usually the gable wall), or by wrought iron ties to a cast iron 'thrust beam' built in to the wall. In some buildings, the arches to the end bays are turned through ninety degrees (Illustration 229).

A number of arched floors were patented. From the late 1840s, corrugated wrought iron arch formers were used in a number of building floors (Illustrations 230 and 231). Protected from the weather, the few surviving examples provide a rare opportunity to view riveted corrugated iron in close to its original condition. Gypsum combined with aggregate made 'Nottingham concrete'. This material, with excellent fire resistance, was used in Dennett's patent arch floor (Illustration 232). Dennett's business partner Mr F Ingle described the system as suitable for spans of 6' to 12', the arch thickness at the crown varying from 3" to


5", and the temporary arch formwork being removed after two to six days (Ingle, 1866). Although Dennett & Ingle were Nottingham-based building contractors, the 'Dennett floor' was quite widely used (Wermiel, 1993). Distributed load and impact tests were carried out on Dennett floors at Hackney Town Hall to satisfy the district surveyor. A 250 lb. block of stone dropped onto the 3'12" thick crown of an arch from a height of

14' 'bruised, but did not break it' (Ingle, 1868). Moreland's of London patented a further variant, again using gypsum concrete and corrugated iron permanent formwork. Tests by the patentee to demonstrate the impact resistance of the Moreland floor involved the dropping of a 650 lb. weight from heights of 4' and 16' onto the crown and haunch respectively (Moreland, 1868). 7.4.2 Plain slab floors and stairs

Illustration 230 Nasmyth S patent arch floor (1848) Nasmyth of Pimlico, London, patented the use of plain or corrugated sheet iron as an arch former; topped with Portland cement concrete andfinished with a tile or wood surface. (Source: Pottea T. 'Concrete: its uses in building from foundations to finish; Batsford, London, 3rd edition, 1908, p1 77 Nasmyth's floor)

Stone landing slabs and stair treads are the norm in early nineteenth century multi-storey industrial buildings, whether of fireproof or traditional construction. The durability of stone stairs under the effects of pedestrian traffic has been proven over centuries in many pre-industrial buildings. In some eighteenth and nineteenth century houses, landings and small balconies of stone (and later in the period, concrete) cantilever from solid masonry walls. Later, plain concrete was used. One writer reported the test of an unreinforced slab, with a 'four to one' concrete mix, 3" thick and cantilevering 3' 9" (Potter, 1908). The support comprised a chase or recess cut 3'12" into 'an old wall'. Left for a year, the slab was then loaded with 107 lbslft'

Illustration 231 The Great Eastern Hotel (Alexander's Mill), Duke Street, Glasgow (1848) Floor Details Corrugated iron to the floor arches has the corrugations running in a perpendicular direction to Naysmith's patent illustration. The relatively small sheets, which must have been curved in the rolls in the direction of the corrugations prior to delivery to site, have carefully riveted side and end laps. The binder in the arch concrete appears to be gypsum rather than Portland cement. (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)


(5.1 kN/mZ) 'without deflection or injury'. The calculated flexural tensile stress in the concrete at the root of the cantilever under the resultant total load is about 4.7 N/mm2. Alarming, but perhaps no more so than the local stresses in the supporting masonry. Details of similar trials on plain concrete slab panels and cantilevers were given during the discussion following a paper to the Royal Institute of British Architects (Payne, 1876). For cantilever or 'hanging' stone stair treads, an 1876 text on building construction recommended that the ends 'should be let into the wall about 9 inches, and very solidly and firmly built in' (Rivington, 1876). Such steps are not true cantilevers as each derives some support from the rear edge of the step below. Sandstone or slate was generally used in floors, the regular bedding planes allowing large slabs or flagstones to be split to an even thickness at the quarry. For British building sandstones, cube crushing strengths in the range 267 - 712 tons/ft2(29 N/mm2- 74 N/mm2) have been obtained, and for slate 720 - 1974 tons/ft2(77 Nlmm' - 212 N/mm2)(Unwin, 1910). The strongest sandstone, 'York stone', was used extensively for the floors of the reconstructed spinning house, part of the Rope works, at Devonport Naval Dockyard in

1815 (Coad, 1983). For modern concrete, the tensile strength on which flexural strength depends is typically '/l0 to '112 of the cube crushing strength, but such a relationship can not be taken for granted for stone. Coke breeze concrete came into use from the 1860s. Breeze, sometimes called coke ashes, or 'pumice', was the finer part of the coke from gas retorts. Towards the end of the nineteenth century, breeze was considered a very good aggregate for making fire-resistant concrete, but only if thoroughly burnt, and derived from a suitable quality of coal (Potter, 1907). Other materials used for aggregates included gravel from a variety of sources, stone chippings, boiler and furnace ashes, and when crushed to a suitable size, debris from quarries, brickyards, potteries and demolished buildings. A high sulphur content in furnace cinders and ashes would produce poor concrete and the satisfactory performance of other types of aggregate too was dependent on proper preparation. Flat concrete slabs do not always contain iron or steel reinforcement. Many slabs were not reinforced, even in buildings of the structural steelwork era. An extension to a paper works in Edinburgh was built in 1897 with a plain concrete slab floor of 165mm thick, spanning 1.8m between Dorman Long steel beams.

Iiku~trwion232 Damw~kpatentarcttfioor (l##) (Soamer Pateat &er 1998,~rlgc@c&v~$Id19th Jwmury 1864, to Chcutes Colton Dsnntatt, of NottimgM) This 'impmedpmo f ' m % f c ~ ~ f ~W%ngs n f i r by rhs we cCfu~&?.~ f d qfeoncmte', ww dmelopdfram a syspm i U & & in 1@7. 2'k qmeifiod~naIhed&r the sgppwi of mmfnfimdarches hy wood beam, j21ched tremq or Mn di&rs @R c~ltfnaans.NN.~ tyirlg d f k @mAds Was spec@& Tk canemte wus to be d e of 'sehare or cerhmta of lime (i.e. a-), together witk b& I z a l c M &&S, ki&, or other pomw mmeriul'. MLx pmprtiQm we% W given ia tk p~tear



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the concrete. At the Royal Albert Hall in 1994, Fox & Barren floors with wrought iron joists spanning 6m, performed satisfactorily under a proof-test load of 7.5 m m 2 (Stagg, 1994). Patents by Measures Bros. (1862) Phillips, Dawnay, and Gardner (Lawford, 1890) were later variants, all with small section joists or tee iron in place of the timber laths (Webster, 1891; Adams, c. 1920). Thomas Potter's practice for the construction of solid floors from 1869 was to use concrete deposited on a timber platform with temporary supports below. The concrete was finished flush with the top and bottom flanges of the supporting joists. Variants on this system used a thinner concrete slab, more as a fireproof ceiling, above which the top flange of the iron joists projected to support a floor of timber joists and boards (Illustration 236). Such systems, generically 'filler joist floors', had several advantages over brickwork arch and beam construction. The weight saving was very considerable, the construction depth less, and the ironwork more completely protected from the effects of fire.

between several joists. This was apparent in instrumented load tests on a c.1894 filler joist floor in a public library in Ashton-under-Lyne (Swailes, 1997). A particular kind of filler joist floor is found in some late nineteenth and early twentieth-century 'Oldharntype' mill buildings. Relatively small iron or steel joists

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In modem terms, with closely spaced supports, filler joist floor construction is an example of 'a load-sharing Illustration 235 Wilkinson'sparent reinforced concrete system'. Concentrated loads are very effectively shared floot Newcastle (c.1865) (Picture: 'Structural Concrete')


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span around 10', as did the brickwork arches that they superseded. The joists are at close spacings and placed near the bottom of a slab of poor concrete of around twice their depth. Tests in the early 1920s showed that the safe working load for this type of floor, under certain circumstances, may be twice that obtained by considering the strength of the joists alone (Etchells, 1927). However, there have been cases where the infill between the joists has failed by punching shear under a concentrated load (Rhodes, 1987). In buildings other than mills, the iron or steel filler joists were generally of deeper section, only a little less than the depth of the concrete, and spaced further apart (Hurst, 1996).

Homan, Homan & Rodgers (1885, and several other dates), Hornblower (1871, 1873), Hyatt, King, Kleine, Lindsay, Northcroft (1876), Phillips, Statham, Swarbrick, Whichcord (c. 1876) and Wilkinson (Illustration 237).

Clearly many 'beam and block' systems were patented, though many were probably not much used, or else their use was localised. To quote one authority, 'patents are ofttimes the result of theoretical vagaries which in actual practice are quite a failure' (Potter, 1908). More research is needed into the use of patent floor systems in Scotland. Hornblower's system was used in four or more buildings in Glasgow by John Honeyman, an architect active in the 1860s and 1870s (Cates, 1878). The structurally innovative and prolific 7.4.4 Later patent floor systems Scottish architects Peddie & Kinnear used 'Fer The great fire that ravaged Chicago in 1871 Tubulair' in Dunblane Hydro, built from 1875-8, and demonstrated to Americans that iron was not fireproof in several other buildings. Exhibited at the 1857 Paris and the message was reinforced the following year by Exhibition, these tubular beams were the invention of a disastrous fire in Boston, Massachusetts (Wermiel, F Zores, who had pioneered the rolling of I-section 1993 and 2000). The devastating fire in Paris during the joists in France in 1848 (Chrimes, 1990). Siege and Commune of 1870-7 1 left a deep impression on the designers of commercial buildings in Britain. The requirements for fire protection to ironwork were 7.5 Fire resistance and fire protection now better appreciated, but more in city centres than in textile mill building, where construction practices 7.5.1 Cast iron elements were rather entrenched. The strength of cast iron reduces at high temperatures In most systems, pre-fabricated shaped blocks of to a slightly lesser extent than steel. Working stresses hollow tile were supported between iron joists, to are lower and sections are much heavier in cast iron which they also provided protection. In the 1830s than in steel, so cast iron elements perform well in James Frost made square hollow tubes by machine for comparison. There were many instances during the constructing floors and flat roofs, but probably for blitz of WWII of cast iron columns remaining standing construction on a domestic scale without iron supports after other parts of a building had been destroyed by (Wermiel, 1993). Concrete was placed over and fire (Evans, 1984). A famous case was that of New sometimes between the blocks, the soffits of which York's Wanamaker Department Store in 1956, the cast generally had dovetailed grooves to provide a key for iron f a p d e remaining intact although fire burned for the plastering mortar. Some of the better known floors, almost a day and the interior of the building was named after their patentees, include Bunnett (1858), destroyed. Such survivals do not change the fact that Doulton-Peto, Fawcett (1888), Frazzi, Ferguson, exposed cast iron has limitations in terms of fire


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resistance, a fact appreciated from the 1870s onwards (Friedman, 1995). A particular concern has been resistance to cracking due to thermal shock caused by water from a firefighter's hose striking - hot cast iron. In tests for the Greater London Council in 1982-83, two unprotected Hodgkinson type cast iron beam sections of 4.07m simply supported span withstood the effects of a standard fire (BS476: 1987) for over an hour (Barnfield, 1984). Temperatures of around 860째C were achieved, under loads giving a bottom flange tensile stress of 23 N/mm2 and causing a permanent deflection during the heating period of 150mm. On removal from the fire, the beams were cooled rapidly by a stream of water from a fireman's hose, with differential cooling producing substantial lateral bending. The top flange and upper part of the web of each beam cracked 10 minutes after application of the water and after the load had been removed. The beams did not fracture through their depth and were capable of being loaded again to the same level 24 hours later. The position of the thermal cracks suggests that tensile stresses were induced in the top flange as the larger bottom flange cooled more rapidly, probably from a higher temperature. A subsequent study was carried out for the Greater London Council in 1986 on the performance of cast iron structural elements in real building fires (Porter, 1998). The general opinion of fire officers was found to be that cast iron performs well in fires and is less

prone to collapse in the early stages of a fire than unprotected steelwork. The study concluded that cast iron beams were more prone to sudden failure and collapse than columns, especially if cooled rapidly when hot (Illustration 238). However, it was concluded that firemen by their experience and training were aware of this hazard and were careful when fighting fires in cast iron framed buildings. Using a 'fire engineering' approach, the exposure of more lightly loaded elements without fire protection may be justifiable. Tests in Germany examined the fire resistance of columns for different levels of concentric loading (Twilt, 2000). An unprotected hollow cast iron column achieved 30 minutes fire resistance at full load, and 50 minutes at half that load. Grouting of the core with concrete gave only a small increase in fire resistance, while an intumescent coating proved to be far more effective. The only type of fire protection that allows ironwork that is exposed to remain so, is the application of an intumescent paint coating to the prepared surface of the metal. Intumescent paint 'foams' on heating to form an insulating layer. Relatively thin film coatings can provide up to 1'12 hours fire resistance without at the same time blunting the finer features of a casting (English Heritage, 1997). A cruciform section cast iron column from a London warehouse achieved a fire resistance of 1 hour in a furnace test and also withstood quenching tests (Baxter, 1984). The columns were


provided with a further 2 hours fire resistance in the converted warehouse by applying intumescent mastic. Where cast iron elements survive a building fire, questions will be asked about their future safety (Illustrations 239 to 241). Creep will first occur at temperatures of around 400째C and, after a fire, cast iron columns may be left with a permanent 'bow'.A hollow column of 127mm outside diameter, removed after a fire at Stanley Mills, was found to be bowed or 'out of straight' by 40mm in a length of 3m (Illustration 242). Testing confirmed that the cast iron had not been heated sufficiently in the fire to cause any measurable reduction in the strength of the material (see also Section 5.3.4). In large hollow circular columns, local buckling or bulging of the relatively thin column wall may take place (Illustration 243). Clearly in some cases distortion will be so severe that retention or reuse of a cast iron column is not an option.

7.5.2 Wrought iron elements The performance on structural wrought iron in fire is very similar to modern mild steel, for which a considerable volume of technical guidance is available. Wrought iron is not permanently weakened by exposure to high temperatures, and it may be possible to straighten elements that become distorted as a result of fire (See Section 5.2).

7.5.3 Floor construction materials (a)

Timber joists and boards

Large timbers will withstand the effects of fire for some time but joists and boards are generally protected. In 1773, David Hartley, the MP for Hull, was granted a patent for a system in which wrought iron sheets, typically 0.3mm thick X 450mm wide, Cracking sometimes occurs as a result of restrained were fixed above and sometimes below timber floor thermal movement. Thermal cracks in columns may joists, which generally had dry sand or rubbish placed be repairable by the methods outlined in Section 8, but cracks in beams, or the possibility of cracks, are more problematic. Surface hairline cracks can form on cooling, as the surface layer cools and contracts more rapidly than the material beneath. It has been suggested that such cracks can open up when a cast iron beam is reloaded, with catastrophic consequences, and that any beams heated to 350째C or above in a fue should be regarded as suspect (Kirby, 1986). It is possible to prove an absence of 'surface' shrinkage cracks after a fire by using non-destructive testing techniques.

Illustration 238 Brittle fracture of cast iron beams as a result offire and fire fighting (Kirby, 1986) (Picture: MI: C. Ashton, reproduced by permission of Corus (UK) Ltd)

lustra ration 239 Morgan Academy, Dundee (1868) Peddie C? Kinnear Drawing extract (Reproduced courtesy of RCAHMS (Dick Peddie and McKay Collection))


rstration 240 Morgan Academy, Dundee (1868) Fire (Picture: DC Thomson and CO)

between them (Kelsall, 1991). 'Hartley's fire plates' were probably little used in the way intended, but wrought iron sheets are quite often found as sofit protection to timber floors and ceilings in textile mills Gypsum plaster is a traditional method for providing a fire resistant decorative finish. Filling the spaces below the floorboards and between the joists with lath and plaster was proposed by Lord Mahon in the eighteenth century, as a kind of 'pugging', later used more as a sound proofing measure. In Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire fire-resistant floors that pre-dated the industrial revolution used coarse plaster made with locally quarried gypsum as a binding material for timber joists, reeds;; laths. H J ~ t e v e n ~~o fe r gave b ~ details during discussions at the Royal Institute of British Architects (Barrett, 1854).

l

Illustration 241 Morgan Academy, Dundee (1868) Tower afterfire (Picture: Mark Watson. Historic Scotland)

I Illustration 242 Stanley Mills. Cast iron column bent in fire (Picture: I Swailes)

Illustration 243 Local bulging at the tops of cast iron columns as the results of high temperatures reached during a particularly severe fire (Kirby, 1986) (Picture: M,: C. Ashton, reproduced by permission of Corus (UK) Ltd)


(b)

BricX?ryork and fired clay blocks

As bricks are exposed to very high temperatures in a kiln during manufacture, they generally have good fire resistance. In brickwork arch floors the encased parts of the supporting beams are quite well protected. For a recent refurbishment project, a fire-engineering approach enabled cast-irdn beams with unprotected soffits to be justified for a fire-resistance of 1 hour (Bussell, 1998). It was found that in the event of a fire, the solid floor structure would act as a 'heat sink', limiting the temperature of the cast iron to an acceptable level. Whichcord's system was subjected to a fire test at engineering firm Easton & Anderson's Erith Iron Works, in Kent (The Engineer, 1874). A rolled wrought iron joist, 17' long X 10" deep X 5" wide, weighing 7 cwt, was laid across a furnace and encased with Whichcord's fired clay blocks. The joist, supporting an arched floor of blocks and loaded to '14 of its breaking load with pig iron, withstood an intense fire for 2'12 hours with only a gradual increase in deflection. After the test the joist was still useable. (c)

(d)

Concrete

Concrete is a loose term embracing a great variety of materials. Early concrete in particular may contain combustible materials and fire resisting properties on a par with modern Portland cement concrete should not be automatically assumed (see also Section 7.4.2). A fire in a six-storey London building in 1871 provided an early demonstration of the fire resistance of good concrete. Damage to the building was described thus; 'The iron doors, columns, girders, floors and roof, and all the ordinary stonework were destroyed, and even the granite paving of the courtyard was damaged. York (sandstone) landings 3 feet by 8 feet and 6 inches thick, forming the cills under the iron doors were entirely destroyed, while the concrete lintels above, which had been exposed to a much fiercer heat, were quite unhurt' (Cates, 1878). In this case the concrete was to Mr Allen's patent specification of 1862, with one part of Portland or other cement and six to eight parts cinders, slag-coke, or clinker (Webster, 1891). Subsequent buildings for the affected owners were built with concrete floors and with concrete encasement to all iron columns and girders.

Stone

Tests in the nineteenth century showed that although sandstone resisted heat better than other types of stone, its fire-resistance was greatly inferior to that of brick (Webster, 1891). According to an 1876 text on building construction, 'Stone is a very bad material for fireproof structures; when subjected to great heat it suddenly cracks, and gives way without warning'. Stone stairs and landings were used principally for their solidity, wear resistance and incombustibility as 'the destruction of stone steps by fire, though not so rapid, is quite as effectual as if they were made of wood' (Rivington, 1876). One early floor combined wrought iron and York stone (sandstone). The system was described when James Barrett presented a paper on floor construction systems in the 1850s (Barrett, 1854). Many years previously Mr Tite, an architect, had used inverted tee sections of riveted wrought iron spanning 15' and spaced 4' apart in the floor of a large public school. York stone slabs, 4" to 6" thick, were laid on the flanges of the tees. Roman cement was used to fill the gaps and form the ceiling. This was along the lines of the patent (c.1826) of a Mr Farrell, a smith on Robert Smirke's Customs House, who distrusted cast iron girders. The arrangement was severely criticised by several architects dubious about the fire-resistance of the stone. One had used this form of construction in his own property, but had not done so again, 'observing that York stone paving was exceedingly destructible by fire, and that practically it did not furnish a fire-proof floor'.

7.5.4 Wlzole building consideratioits At a temperature of 600째C, cast iron loses about half its strength and the length of a 4m long beam of cast iron (or wrought iron or steel) would increase by about 25mm. Even though an individual beam may possess good fire resistance in itself, it is necessary to consider how the various parts of a building structure interact during a fire. There are many unknowns. For example, what forces are exerted on the supports of a beam, as they tend to restrain its thermal expansion? One conclusion of studies for the Greater London Council in the 1980s was that there was no realistic alternative to fire protection of cast iron elements in buildings in which there is a significant fire load, such as shops and offices, hotel bedrooms and domestic dwellings. Of course, every effort should be made to prevent fires from occurring in the first place. Lessons learned from a serious fire at Windsor Castle in 1992 were incorporated in an updated Fire Protection Association Guide on the protection of historic buildings (Kidd, 1995). Although fire safety legislation in the UK is concerned principally with the protection of life, the loss of historic buildings and their contents by fire is particularly significant, as once lost, they can not be replaced. Historic Scotland TAN 11 gives guidance on identifying and eliminating fire risks in historic buildings and reviews available fire detection and protection solutions (Allwinkle, 1997). Advice is given on choosing fire prevention measures that involve an acceptable level of intervention in the historic fabric of a building. TAN 22 is concerned specifically with fire


risk management in 'heritage buildings', a term that includes historic buildings as well as buildings that house historic collections, such as museums, galleries, libraries and archives (Kidd, 2001). Risk assessment approaches are explained that aim to reduce the risk of fire, and also aim to minimise fire damage to historic building fabric or contents.

Illustration 244 Fire fighting at a distance (Picture: DC Thomson and CO)

The installation of sprinkler systems in historic buildings is considered in Historic Scotland TAN 14. In empty multi-storey industrial buildings, the remains of fire detection and sprinkler systems are quite likely to be present, but no longer providing protection to the building. Empty non-fireproof factories and warehouses are at great risk. It is vitally important that building security be maintained to prevent the unauthorised entry of anyone who might deliberately or accidentally start a fire, as any fire is likely to develop and spread undetected. Once a fire takes hold in a large building, it is very difficult for the Fire Brigade to get close enough to stop its destructive progress (Illustration 244). Structural ironwork components are quite likely to survive a fire unscathed. Unfortunately, the skills of the founder who made them and the builder who used them are not reflected in their scrap value (Illustrations 245 & 246).

Illusrration 245 Weensland Mill. Hrcwick (1850) Heavy I-section columns supporting stone masonry arches Spinning m~11r.y stand in thefi)reground of tl~isphotograph, taken in 1989. (Picture: Mark Watson, Historic Scotland)


throughout Britain. Heavy timbers burn slowly, charcoal to their exposed faces insulating sound timber beneath. In 1871 and 1873, Thaddeus Hyatt obtained British patents for a 'slow-burning' floor system. In 1876 Evans & Swain patented a further variant (Cates, 1878). Joists 2" or 3" thick were spiked together side by side and their soffits rebated to provide a key for a thick plaster render. Alternatively, the key for the plaster might be provided by flat headed nails driven into the undersides of the joists. Slow-burning construction was used, in combination with timber storey posts, in the construction of several warehouses in London's East India Docks. The original proposal had been for concrete floor arches on wrought iron girders, supported on cast iron columns with a 4" of tenacotta as fire-protection. James Braidwood reported that 'after a fire at a sugarhouse at Leith, which was built on the usual fire-proof principle, with iron columns and girders and brick arches, nothing remained but a heap of ruins' (Braidwood, 1849). Braidwood was a strong advocate of the modern principle of 'compartmentation' to limit the size and spread of any fire to manageable proportions. Taking the firefighters' point of view, he believed that warehouses should be 'of a moderate size, with access on two sides at least, completely separated from each other by part walls, and protected by iron doors and window shutters'. Illustration 246 Weensland Mill, Hawick (1850) Heavy Isection columns on the scrap heap, after destruction of the building by fire (Picture: T Swailes)

7.5.5 An historical perspective on fireproof buildings and fire There were alternatives to iron framing in the nineteenth century and its opponents increased in number after the collapse of Radcliffe's cotton mill near Oldham in 1844 (see Illustration 46). James Braidwood's view of iron framed buildings was that 'unless scientifically constructed, they are very unlikely to be safe, independent of the risk of fire' (Braidwood, 1849). In the event of fire, exposed ironwork was certainly not fireproof. American visitors in the latter part of the nineteenth century were surprised at the lack of f i e protection to structural iron in British factory buildings (Wermiel, 1993). In the United States, 'slow-burning' construction was used for most factories, rather than the various forms of fully iron-framed 'fireproof' construction used

Braidwood, the son of an Edinburgh builder, was Superintendent of the Edinburgh Fire Engines during the 'Great Fire of Edinburgh' in November 1824. After reforming the Edinburgh fire service, placing emphasis on effective alarms and a rapid response, Braidwood moved to London (Henham, 2000). Braidwood's report on the fire that destroyed the Houses of Parliament was one of the factors that led to their reconstruction on fireproof principles, with cast iron framing on a hitherto unprecedented scale. In 1854, Braidwood wrote to the Commissioner of Public Works on proposals for a large jute warehouse in the London docklands; 'The whole building, if once fairly on fire in one floor, will become such a mass of fire, that there is now no power in London capable of extinguishing it, or even of restraining its ravages on every side, and on three sides it will be surrounded by property of immense value'. Braidwood's words were tragically prophetic, as the building was destroyed by fire in 1861, it's fall causing an explosion in an adjacent building containing highly flammable tallow, tar and resin, which in turn set fire to other warehouses and buildings. Braidwood was one of six firefighters who died trying to subdue the blaze.


8 CONSERVATION AND REPAIR

8.1

General principles

The study of the cultural significance of a building and its surroundings is broad in nature and sometimes involves disciplines not normally associated with the construction industry. Generally, a construction professional with expertise in building conservation will use facts and opinions from a variety of sources in drawing up an overall conservation or maintenance plan. Sometimes the input of a structural engineer will be essential. For example, restriction of the uses of the upper floors of a building is a conservation measure that might prevent damage to ceiling finishes due to excessive deflections. Once a conservation project is under way, a proper level of professional direction and supervision must be maintained through to completion. A log should be kept of the work carried out. Any new evidence or unexpected forms of construction found during the course of the work should be recorded, particularly if they make necessary an approved departure from the original plan. Generally, the disturbance of fabric to assist the study of a building should only be undertaken to obtain data essential for decisions on its conservation. In the case of an iron-framed building with a filler joist, or concrete and ash, or flagstone floor, wholesale replacement of the original material would lose archaeological evidence. There may be a case for disturbance of fabric to secure evidence about to be lost, or made inaccessible, through necessary conservation or other unavoidable action. Destructive investigation that adds substantially to a scientific body of knowledge may be permitted, provided that it is consistent with the overall conservation policy for the building. A record, possibly involving materials sampling and testing, should be made in these circumstances. When hidden structural iron framing details are exposed, it may be valuable and aesthetically pleasing to leave some examples uncovered for future study, fie-resistance requirements permitting. The ramp that wraps around the columns to form the public entrance to New Lanark Mill 3 is an example of what can be done. (Illustration 36).

A fundamental principle of conservation is respect for the existing fabric, which determines that conservation actions should involve the least possible physical intervention. In particular, they should not distort the evidence provided by the fabric. When this principle is

Illustration 247 Spalling and (structural?) repair of stone balcony slab, caused by expansion (thermal or corrosion related?) of inset cast iron railings (Picture: T Swailes)

applied to the conservation of ironwork, it favours the in-situ repair of ironwork rather than its replacement with, for example, new castings, or with re-cycled wrought iron. Sometimes replacement of iron elements will be necessary to ensure structural integrity. For decorative ironwork, retention and repair of the existing fabric rarely compromises the aesthetic integrity of a building. Techniques employed should usually be traditional, although in some circumstances they may be modern ones for which a firm scientific basis exists and which are supported by a body of experience. For example, resin-bonded carbon fibre reinforcement, as used on concrete motorway bridges, is a new technique very recently tried on iron bridges, is reversible and may revolutionise the performance of historic iron structures. While it is important to stay abreast of the development of novel repair techniques, historic buildings are not suitable subjects for experimentation. That is not to say that building conservation is backward looking, as much scientific research is being carried out into the properties of materials, processes of degradation and methods of preservation. Great advances are now being made in the conservation of modern materials, including metals. Iron is invariably found alongside other materials, including timber, masonry and glass, so its


n p 248 Damage to Iron railings in G l a s g o ~ ~ Nlust Failure to weed out vegetation from beneath the coping has resulted in avoidable damage. (Picture: Jacobs Babtie)

Illustration 249 Beam web loss due to corrosion A patent blockfloor over a neglected basement, supported (just) by a severely corroded wrought iron or steel beam. (Picture: Joe Marsh)

conservation should not be considered in isolation. The neglect or inappropriate treatment of one part of a building often leads to the deterioration of other parts. Putting off apparently trivial regular maintenance tasks can lead to unnecessary repair works that have a cost out of proportion to their cause (Illustration 248). Once damage has been caused to masonry it may be extremely difficult to repair in a satisfactory manner (Illustration 247). Basements and covered light wells should not be neglected, as they can provide environments where corrosion can progress unseen, to a point where structural safety is compromised (Illustration 249).

protection of parapets. Works purely of repair (in a like material) that do not affect the character of a listed building do not require Listed Building Consent. As a rule of thumb, additional fabric, such as carbon-fibre resin bonded to iron, or a lightweight reinforced concrete mesh overlying a floor is likely to be unobtrusive and reversible and may not on its own require Listed Building Consent. On the other hand replacement of elements, e.g. steel or GRC in place of iron, is a matter for listed building consent and will need careful consideration and justification.

8.2

Listed Building Consent

Where a building is listed, at whatever category (A, B or C(S)), demolition or alterations in such a way as to affect its character will require Listed Building Consent. The relevant local authority planning department will be able to advise whether the works proposed require Listed Building Consent. Except in cases relating to category C(S) buildings, once a council has determined an application that decision is notified to Historic Scotland. It is often advisable to involve Historic Scotland's Inspectorate early in discussions relating to significant changes. Whether or not the particular element affected is mentioned in the non-statutory list description has no bearing on whether listed building consent is required. Frequently, interiors will not have been inspected, and some list descriptions are more perfunctory than others. Works to iron structures that fall into this category can include f a ~ a d retention, e dismantling, relocation, overcladding (e.g. false ceilings or encasement as fire protection), and removal of pillars from shopfronts or within buildings. In cases of bridges, strengthening or widening is often desired, or the replacement or

Some case histories regarding iron structures can offer guidance, although each application will be treated on its own merits as well as by reference to the Memorandum of Guidance on listed Buildings and Conservation Areas (1998). A proposal to replace the arched cast iron Carron Bridge in steel, and refix the external ribs to the new structure, was called in the Secretary of State for Scotland and then withdrawn during a Public Local Inquiry. On the other hand this action has been accepted as part of widening programmes for smaller and lower-lying bridges, such as Bridge of Newe, Aberdeenshire. A proposal to demolish and rebuild behind the four fagades of West Bridge Mill, Kirkcaldy, and install new structure, basically because engineers were unfamiliar with and lacked confidence in the iron frame, was amended to one retaining the structure (at much lesser cost) in order to allow the granting of listed building consent for the conversion to West Bridge Foyer. A similar situation was narrowly averted, in part thanks to the second opinion of consulting engineers, in the case of Gardner's warehouse, Jamaica Street, GIasgow. On the other hand listed building consents for faqade retention have occasionally been granted where it is concluded that the interest of the structure per se does not override the imperative to add value, increase floorloadings, and sometimes additional storeys. Early


consultation with the planning authority and with the Historic Scotland's Inspectorate is therefore recommended.

83

Conservation Areas

Applications to demolish any building within a conservation area require Conservation Area Consent. This will not usually be determined without consideration of the impact of the existing building and of the proposed development on the character of the conservation area. The relevant Conservation Area Character Appraisal should be consulted, if available. It may for example give particular emphasis to the contribution made to that character by iron in railings, brattishing or shopfronts, which would then give greater importance to the retention, or reinstatement if missing, of these features.

8.4

A

Illustration 250 Cold stitch repairs A wrought iron stitch repair of a damaged decorative casting (Picture: Domthea Restorations Ltd)

Scheduled Monument Consent

Any work, both of alteration and repair, to a Scheduled Ancient Monument requires Scheduled Monument Consent from Scottish Ministers. Advice on this is available from Historic Scotland's Inspectorate.

85

Mechanical repair and strengthening

Cracked castings are often repaired mechanically to avoid the thermal stresses and distortions associated with welding. However, the cause of cracking needs to be established before an appropriate form of repair can be chosen. Cracking releases stresses and a repaired casting may crack again, either at the repair or somewhere else, if the stresses that caused the cracking are not eliminated or reduced. The blacksmith's repair to cracked cast iron is a wrought iron stitch (Illustration 250) (Wallis, 1999). In the modem version of this, for castings thicker than 6mm, shaped keys of ductile alloy are used. These are fitted across the fracture into holes pre-formed by a combination of drilling and pneumatic chiselling. Across the fracture and along its length, interlocking studs are screwed into the drilled and tapped holes. Such repair techniques have been established for over 50 years and are the province of the specialist contractor. However, guarantees of structural be treated with performance particularly if offered without proof-testing. On a stitch the surface may be finished flush to render the repair almost invisible 251 & 252). The restoration of the 1816 is an Ha'penny Bridge Over the Liffey in example of a recent project where crack stitching of

Illustration 251 Cold stitch repairs A cold stitched repair to a cracked cast iron column (Picture:Dorot,ea Restorations Ltd)

cast iron was among the repair techniques used (Cox, 2002; de Courcy, 1991). Mechanical cold repairs to castings involve the limited removal of some original material. where additional strength is required, one solution is to bolt on robust repair additional material to make a (Illustration 253). Decorative cast iron panels, probably too thin to weld, have been successfully repaired by bolting 2mm thick galvanised steel backing plates to


Thc stitching pmcess: 1 The broken casting is clampcd together and holc drilled accross thc crack using iI jig 2 Thc holcs arc joincd hy a specially-shapcd pncumatir chisel. 3 Spccial srirchcs arc driven into thc slots in layers through the metal's dcpth 4 Intcrlcxking holes arc drillcd along thc linc of the crack. thcn 5 Tapped (i.e. threaded), :nd 6 Studs are scrcwcd in to seal the crack. 7 The surface is finally drcsscd off. and X Painted, resulting in an invisible repair. achieved without heating thc components. Illirstration 252 Cold stitch repairs The stitching process (Picture: Dorothea Restorations Ltd)

their plain inside faces. The reinforcing plates were bedded in resin and sealed round. Aesthetics were not generally considered in past repairs to industrial structures, but such past repairs should be left as found where possible (Illustrations 254 and 255). 8.6

Surface bonded reinforcement

According to a recent Institution of Structural Engineers guide, the largest use of adhesives in civil engineering, over 7510, is in repairs (IStructE, 1999). Several weak cast iron bridges have been strengthened with surface bonded reinforcement. Bures Bridge in Suffolk was strengthened by gluing steel plates to the arched soffits of cast iron deck beams (Robbins, 1991). Bonded steel sections were used to stiffen slender cast iron struts and bracing diaphragms in Thomas Telford's 1826 Mythe Bridge over the River Severn (Bolton, 1992).

More recently, carbon fibre reinforced polymer composites (CFRP) have been used by London Underground Ltd for short-term temporary repairs to cast iron bridge beams and to add additional stiffness to very large-section cast iron retaining wall props (Moy, 2001). To relieve a proportion of the dead load stresses in weak cast iron beams, trials have also been made on the application of pre-stressed externally bonded reinforcement. The 1874 Hythe Bridge, Oxford, was strengthened with 4mm thick prestressed carbon fibre strip applied to the soffits of cast iron girders. Thomas Wilson's 1810 Tickford Bridge in Northamptonshire, made by Walker & Co. of Rotherham, was strengthened using carbon fibre reinforced bandaging (Tilly, 2002). The use of adhesives and high strength modern materials is a promising and potentially reversible strengthening technique, but long-term performance


An unusual conservation project: a gentleman S toilet in central London, made of cast iron panels only 6mm thick. Conservation work included a broken panel which was repaired by bolting to backing plate of galvanised steel 2mm thick bedded on resin and sealed round. If such a thin plate of cast iron had been welded, it would have cracked repeatedly: welding is not recommended for thin sections. Illustration 253 Cold repair and reinforcement by plating A broken decorative cast iron panel reinforced with a stainless steel backing plate. (Picture: Dorothea Restorations Ltd)

Illustration 254 Cold repair and reinforcement by plating Old repair to damaged cast iron I-section stanchion (Picture: Michael Bussell)

Illustration 255 Cold repair and reinforcement by plating Old repair to damaged cast iron I-section stanchion (Picture: Michael Bussell)


Illustration 256 Dockyard Transit Shed, Victoria Dock, Dundee (1874) (Picture: Historic Sc~tland)

has yet to be proven. A high standard of workmanship is essential for success and the detection of faulty workmanship is likely to be difficult (McGrath, 1999). Great care must be taken in following the manufacturer's specifications for surface preparation, application of the reinforcement and subsequent curing. The work is to some degree sensitive at all these stages to environmentaI temperature and humidity. The fire resistance of such systems is very poor. The visual impact of CFRP was trialled recently, as soffit reinforcement and wrapping for a cast iron beam and column respectively, at the 1797 former flax mill in Ditherington, Shrewsbury. Although the trial was not followed through, the technique may prove useful in some buildings as a strengthening measure, but only where the added strength is not required in the event of a fire. To ensure compliance with the disproportionate collapse requirements of the Building Regulations, the robustness of multi-storey cast iron framed fireproof buildings with brick arch floors may sometimes need to be improved. In such cases, the recommended solution is to provide a lightweight reinforced concrete structural topping (see Section 7.3.2) rather than beam soffit reinforcement. Illustration 257 Dockyard Iran! Czed, oria Dock, rative casting Dundee (1874) Rainwater hopp- ith a removed (but kept safe!) (Picture: I: Swailes)


8.7

Hot repairs

8.7.I Wrought iron Repair or strengthening work may involve the use of fusion welding to join pieces of wrought iron or to join steel to wrought iron. This is a job for skilled specialists. Few problems should be encountered in welding high quality wrought iron with low carbon and sulphur content, typically 0.035% C, c 0.02% S, and with very thin and well distributed slag 'stringers' or 'threads' (TWI, 2001). The greater slag content of poorer quality wrought iron, the result of less complete mechanical working, makes welding more difficult as large slag inclusions may form in the weld. Weldability can be determined by chemical analysis in combination with the examination of micro-sections to determine the distribution and volume of slag. Site welding of structural work is perfectly possible, provided that the welders are properly trained and qualified to work on wrought iron. Care must be taken in the choice of weld metal and welding technique and,

for positional work on site, manual metal arc welding will generally be preferred (Watkinson, 1965). Excessive penetration of the weld into the parent plate should be avoided to reduce the risk of slag inclusions in the weld metal. High sulphur content can also lead to cracking at the grain boundaries of the heat-affected zone, the extent of which can be Iimited by the use of small diameter electrodes. In the early 1980s, Brolit Welding Ltd used rutile type electrodes of 2.5mrn to 3.25mm diameter for the repair and strengthening of the roof to Manchester Central Railway Station (Brolit, 1985). Prior to the refurbishment of this magnificent building as the Greater Manchester Exhibition Centre, there were serious concerns that the wrought iron roof had deteriorated beyond the point of economic repair. Welding procedure tests should be carried out for structural work and it may be prudent to seek specialist advice at an early stage. For the repair in the 1960s of the corroded wrought iron roof to Aldgate Station on London's Metropolitan and Circle lines, 8" X '12" steel reinforcing plates were welded to the twin wrought iron angles that formed the bottom chord of the roof trusses (Squires, 1968). The work was completed without interruption to the railway traffic passing below. Trials made by The Welding Institute on a sample of wrought iron removed from the roof determined the best techniques and choice of electrodes for the work. Before fillet welding, the corroded edges of the wrought iron angles were ground back to sound metal, with any surface contamination in the weld area removed by flame cleaning andlor wire brushing.

8.7.2 Cast iron For grey cast iron, repair by fusion welding is possible, but because of the brittleness of the material, tolerance to thermal contraction is low and other joining techniques will generally be considered first. Welding of cast iron is a specialist activity, used primarily in mechanical engineering applications where processes can be very tightly controlled, and where the whole of a component to be welded can be pre-heated (Rees, 1999). In the restoration of the 1802 Stratfield Saye Bridge, cracked elements too small in section to be stitched without excessive loss of strength were successfully welded. The pieces were removed from site and the welding carried out under carefully controlled conditions.

Illustration 258 Broken railirtgs in Edinburgh (Picture: T Swailes)

For cast iron, manual metal arc welding with graphite coated nickel-based small diameter welding rods and with appropriate pre-heating is the most widely used method. Oxy-acetylene welding provides a reliable way of depositing cast iron filler materials of softness compatible with the parent metal, but is very slow and leads to large thermal contraction strains because of the


Illustration 259 Gate pier of cast iron with wrought ironflourishes, Thoresby Hall, Newark (Picture: T Swailes) After cleaning and prior to conservation by Heritage Engineering, The Industrial Heritage Co. Ltd

mortar is unsuitable as a filling - material for ironwork, as it is porous and liable to shrink relative to the iron, thus providing a path for water penetration.

Illustration 260 Replication of missing cast iron fragments using a 'pattern' of vinyl rubber backed with plaster (Picture: Dorothea Restorations Ltd)

large volume of metal heated. For non-structural applications, or where high strength is not essential, non-fusion welding or brazing using bronze-based alloys has proved successful.

8.8

Filling and jointing materials

A variety of compounds were used in the nineteenth century for filling surface casting flaws (Calvert, 187479). One recipe for filler for 'small defects in iron castings' was to fuse nine parts of lead with one of antimony and one of bismuth to form 'an alloy that expands on cooling, and will keep its place'. For modern cosmetic repairs, epoxy-based metal filler may be used prior to repainting. Portland cement or cemcnt

In structural castings in particular, cracks or large surface voids that may weaken an element significantly may be exposed during cleaning for repainting. An advantage of stripping components down to the bare metal is that hidden defects and poorly carried out past repairs will be exposed. A structural inspection of cleaned elements should be made prior to making good defects. Wide gaps between casting joints or cracks within castings may be the result of thermal or structural movements. Filling with inflexible material (or cold stitching) may be inappropriate unless the cause of the defect has been identified and eliminated. Movement joints (sometimes designed and at other times coincidental) are necessary for the effective performance of most iron structures. Gaps in bolted joints between castings were often filled with a material called 'rust-cement' or 'iron-cement'. One unappealing recipe was 'two parts sal-ammoniac, one part flour of sulphur and 200 parts iron borings, made to a paste with water or old urine'. Sometimes such materials are found together with wrought iron wedges or packing pieces. Hardwood packings and wedges have been found on several occasions during the dismantling of cast iron bridges and cast iron framed buildings.


Illustration 261 Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880) A bolted splice connectionforming part of repairs near the apex of the roof (Picture: Network Rail)

Water tanks were generally made up of flanged cast iron panels, bolted together. One form of waterproof joint was exposed during an investigation of the Perth Water Works cistern, now forming the upper storey of the Fergusson Gallery (Allen, Gordon & Co., 2001). The original panel joints contained sealing strips of leather (treated for waterproofing purposes with some kind of organic compound) and wrought iron packing strips. Corrosion and expansion of the wrought iron packing had caused cracking of many of the cast iron panel flanges and failure of several of the wrought iron fixing bolts.

is structurally efficient. In some cases replacement rather than repair of a damaged component will have to be considered. It may be acceptable to replace missing or broken elements in a kit of parts, provided that some original intact examples remain. Where pieces are broken off a casting they should be retained, either for re-attachment if possible, or as patterns from which satisfactory replacements can be made. Where small pieces are lost, replication of similar surviving pieces may be possible (Illustration 260). Prevention is better than cure, and items such as cast iron railings should be protected against impact damage during building works.

Replacement of elements or missing pieces 8.9 A piece of structural or architectural ironwork one or two hundred years old may be expected to show the effects of wear, corrosion and weathering, and perhaps some bits will be damaged or missing. Architectural cast iron in heavily trafficked areas is vulnerable to damage, and damage is far more easily caused than repaired (Illustration 258). Sometimes vulnerable decorative pieces may be temporarily removed to keep them safe (Illustrations 256 & 257). Provided that the element is safe and serviceable, conservation should generally be canied out with the aim of preventing further degradation, without removing the 'patina of age' (Illustration 259).

Cast iron railings are made in panels and although the repair of a single damaged baluster by drilling and tapping components together may not be very satisfactory, minor damage does not justify the casting of a replacement panel. Drilled and tapped balusters or baluster panels may be fixed to a capping rail using countersunk stainless steel fixings (Catt, 1995). Galvanised fixings are not recommended for cast iron as bi-metallic corrosion will result.

Repair is always preferred to replication. However, it may not be possible to make an unobtrusive repair that

Unless there is very good reason for not doing so, materials should be replaced like for like. New castings moulded in green sand from well made wooden patterns can give a surface finish and fine detail as good as that achieved by Scotland's eighteenth and nineteenth century architectural ironwork foundries. Each foundry has a preferred mix or recipe


Illustration 262 Broken cast iron railings (Picture: Swailes)

Illustration 264 Forging of wrought iron glazing bars (Picture: Dorothea Restorations Ltd)

for different types of casting, including decorative work and, because the raw materials are better understood, modern grey cast iron is generally superior in terms of material strength to any made in the nineteenth century. Poor workmanship at the foundry can result in poor castings being made from superior materials and a good casting will be generally free from surface blowholes or scabs and require little 'fettling' prior to painting. If possible, the opportunity should be taken to examine castings at the foundry prior to their being painted. The ownership of patterns should be agreed at the outset between the client and the foundry as patterns are expensive and may retain a value once the work for which they were made has been completed.

Illustration 263 Welded repairs to wrought iron glazing bar ends (Picture: Heritage Engineering Ltd)

Occasionally, safety reasons may be cited as justification for the comprehensive replacement of original parts using superior modern materials. An example is the upgrading of the solid cast iron parapets at North Bridge Edinburgh, over Waverley Station. Here the panels were recast in spheroidal graphite (SG) cast iron, for greater ductility and to cover new steel vehicle restraints. For the ornate cast iron parapets to Cleveland Bridge in Bath a solution was found that


Illusrration 266 Skelnzorlie Castle, Lnrgs: garden conservatory (c.1860) Curved wrought iron ribs to the roof comprise strip riveted to the sides of rectangular bar; as a bearing for the glazing. With the glazing incomplete, the detail traps water (Picture: 7: Swailes)

Illustration 265 Skelmorlie Castle, Largs: garden conservatory (c.1860)Severe corrosion at the lower bearing of a wrought iron rib. Note that the supporting cast iron member remains in good condition (Picture: T. Swailes)

Ill~~stration 267 Kingsknowe Hotel conservatory Decorutive cast iron facing panel. The panels conceal the timber and iron posts n'ithin the conservatory walls (Picti~re:7: Swailes)

enabled the original material to be retained. Raised kerbs were provided to the sides of the road crossing the bridge, profiled to deflect vehicles away from the pavement and the parapets. Replacement in steel may be regretted afterwards. Elements of Craigellachie Bridge were replaced with structural steelwork in 1963, only for the whole bridge to be by-passed a decade later. Aside from any visual impact, replacement of original parts of an iron structure involves the loss of information on the original methods and materials of construction, including metallurgical properties and early techniques of metal working and jointing. Where replacement is unavoidable and has been approved, details of the affected parts of the structure should be comprehensively recorded before work is carried out and also while connection details are revealed during any dismantling work. Where use of original materials is not possible, the aim should be to cany out a well-

Illustration I Kingsknowe Hotel conservatory zage to cast iron fc-.,.d panel. Water can penetrate to thc .,dr face of the panel, which is inaccessible for cleaning and painting. Water ingress is also likely to lead to deterioration of the timber elements (Picture: T. Swailes)


detailed 'honest' repair or replacement, in which modem materials and methods blend with the original structure, while being distinguishable from it (Illustration 261). Periodic replacement of components on an extensive scale leads to difficult questions about the authenticity of a historic structure. The Palm House in Kew Gardens is an interesting case which illustrates shifting attitudes and practices in conservation over the last 50 years (Minter, 1990). The building was neglected during the Second World War and closed to the public in 1952 after an unfavourable engineer's report recommended replacement with a new structure. Good sense prevailed, the glass was removed, and the ironwork was taken back to bare metal and defects made good. Some original wrought iron glazing bars were replaced with galvanised steel sections. For reglazing, green-tinted glass sheets in 3' lengths were used, these being a near-match to the original cylinder glass supplied by Chance & Co. of Birmingham. Although painted inside and out at regular intervals after the 1950s restoration, thirty years later the structure was again in poor condition. From 1985 to 1989 the building was dismantled, and a large number of corroded and damaged parts replaced or repaired prior to re-assembly. For this restoration, more extensive use was made of new materials. The original wrought iron glazing bars were replaced with stainless steel extrusions, the earlier restoration of the Belfast Palm House having set a precedent with the use of extruded mild steel bars. Modem toughened glass was used to glaze some areas and annealed glass was used elsewhere. Quite a number of the original cast iron and the larger wrought iron structural sections were replaced in ductile or spheroidal graphite (SG) cast iron. More recently, recycled original materials have been used in glasshouse restorations. For the glasshouse at Glasnevin, Dublin (which like the Kew Palm House was constructed by Richard Turner) a forging process was developed by Dorothea Restorations Ltd to enable twenty different glazing bar profiles to be replicated in recycled wrought iron (Illustration 264). For the restoration of Glasgow's Tollcross Winter Gardens, The Industrial Heritage CO, replaced the heavily corroded lower bearing ends of the wrought iron glazing bars by welding on wrought iron sections of matching profile (Illustration 263). Much more of the original fabric has been retained than was the case with the Palm House at Kew, in the interests of authenticity. To make rolls to match existing sections is expensive, but the Real Wrought Iron Co. in North Yorkshire rolls old wrought iron into square, round and flat bars and undertakes to match any existing section (Topp, 2001). In every case, it is advisable to agree the approach to be taken either by means of an agreed conservation plan

or by prior discussion with the relevant Conservation Officer or Historic Buildings Inspector. The replacement of bolts or rivets that have lost a significant part of their cross-section as a result of corrosion may sometimes be necessary. Provided their details are recorded, and that some examples of the original fixings can be retained on the structure, replacement is likely to be acceptable. By virtue of their hand-crafted nature, reflecting local traditions, blacksmith's forgings will merit greater care in their conservation than will mass-produced fixings. If as part of a refurbishment project other corrosionresistant metals are used alongside iron or steel, such as stainless steel or aluminium, the abutting surfaces must be isolated electrically (see Section 8.7.1). Neoprene isolating washers or epoxy bedding materials may be used for this purpose (Gibbs, 2000; Wallis, 1999). 8.10

Corrosion and corrosion prevention

8.10.1 Corrosion

Iron rusts or corrodes in the presence of oxygen and water, reverting to the natural oxide forms of the iron ores from which it was extracted. Corrosion is generally prevented by the application of surface coatings designed to keep the iron dry. Water borne products of the corrosion of iron or steel may be deposited as reddish-brown rust stains. Below ironwork bearings orjoints in buildings such staining is a sign of past leaks and a pointer to areas that require inspection. Rust should be removed and paintwork made good as soon as signs of wear and tear are noticed. In roof structures, the lower parts of rafters or glazing bars are particularly vulnerable (Illustration 265). Ironwork details that work well in a dry, wellmaintained building can be the seat of corrosion related problems when water is allowed in (Illustration 266). Unchecked, corrosion will progressively eat away the metal beneath permeable outer layers of rust. As corrosion continues, the products of corrosion expand to occupy a volume many times greater than the original metal. Where wrought-iron is built-in to masonry and the expansion associated with corrosion is restrained, the resulting bursting forces may split the masonry units or 'jack' apart the joints into which the ironwork is embedded. Cracking of cast iron decorative elements is quite often corrosion-related (Illustrations 267 and 268). Cast iron has far better natural corrosion resistance than wrought iron, which in turn is a little more resistant to corrosion than modem mild steel. Loss of cross-section due to corrosion is generally more significant, also rolled wrought iron and steel sections


ItLusrrarton LOY gueen arreer Atarton, wasgow: Main trarn shea roof ( I mu) rtze roof from above, the temporary coverzng and containment structure for removal of lead-based paints at one end. (Picture: Network Rail)

as they are thin compared to cast iron sections. Even in the early twentieth century, cast iron beams were being used despite the weakness of the material in tension. As one writer put it, 'no kind of girder is so suited for damp basements and similar situations, or as proof against atmospheric changes, as the cast iron' (Dawnay, 1901). In the mid-nineteenth century, it was believed that a thin film of iron silicate formed a protective layer on the surface of a casting when the molten iron reacted chemically with the moulding sand.

a form of corrosion that does not require the presence of oxygen. The products of internal corrosion are continually removed from the inside of the pipe by flowing water, leaving behind only a 'skeleton' composed mainly of graphite. There is no loss or increase in section, although a very considerable thickness of cast iron may have been 'converted' and have negligible mechanical strength. When cast iron columns have also served as rainwater down-pipes, the taking of cores from the column walls to check the extent of graphitisation is recommended.

Cast iron is generally resistant to atmospheric corrosion. Even where the ends of cast iron beams have been embedded for many years in damp masonry, the loss of section or corrosion-related expansion is usually insignificant. The condition of the bearings of wrought iron or steel beams on the other hand requires careful investigation.

Corrosion of iron in air is increased by some atmospheric pollutants and, in a marine environment, by the presence of salts. Pollutant or salt particles may act as centres from which uneven corrosion pitting develops. Splash or spray zones, subject to repeated wetting and drying, are affected worst of all. Coastal structures suffer from wear due to the movement of shingle beaches and, at higher levels, due to wind blown sand (Bateman, 1999). In such aggressive environments, the wear resistance of the corrosion protection system is crucial.

There is a long tradition in the use of cast iron for quality rainwater goods, such as hoppers, down-pipes and gutters. In some cases components serve a dual role, both as part of the rainwater disposal system for a building and as structural supports. Cast iron water pipes deteriorate over time as a result of graphitisation,

Soil, masonry, mortar, concrete of uncertain composition, and other materials that may be in contact


with iron, may contain a variety of corrosive agents. Opening up of representative vulnerable areas for inspection and sampling for chemical analysis of the materials surrounding the iron may be required.

strengthened by concrete encasement at beach level (Bateman, 1999). Deck level pier ironwork was traditionally protected with thick, lead-based primers with thicker pitch finishes, applied hot.

The terms electrochemical or galvanic corrosion are used to describe increased corrosion arising from contact between dissimilar metals, or in some instances, two pieces of the same metal. When iron is in contact with a metal which is electrochemically less reactive, such as copper, its rate of corrosion in the presence of oxygen and water will increase. The effect will be greatest if the iron parts of the structure are small in size compared to the copper parts, as with iron rivets to copper sheathing, for example.

Until fairly recently, the protection of external ironwork against corrosion generally involved localised repairs and over-painting. However, it is possible that what is found on the lowest layer in a paint scrape may not be original, but what was applied after an earlier episode of cleaning down to bare metal.

8.10.2 Original corrosion prevention systems and finishes Traditional and most modern paint systems consist of a primer, undercoat, and topcoat. The primer provides a good key to the metal surface, the undercoat acts as a barrier to the penetration of moisture and air and the topcoat seals the surface and provides a decorative finish (Ashurst, 1988). The characteristics of existing paint layers must be determined before they are disturbed as part of any repainting work. Red lead (bright orange when first exposed by scraping) is the most effective of the traditional primers. It is an effective rust inhibitor, but it is toxic, as are other leadbased paints that were used in the past (see Section 8.7.4). From the mid-nineteenth century, iron oxide primers came into wide use, particularly for engineered structures (Matheson, 1873). Although red oxide primer does not act as a rust inhibitor, it was much cheaper and less heavy than red lead, and it adheres very well to iron. For sheet iron cladding, zinc galvanising was used to provide additional protection after patents were taken out in the late 1830s by H Crawford (Warren, 1970). The 1847 catalogue of a Birmingham based manufacturer of corrugated iron roofs and buildings, many destined for export to British colonies, gave some details of alternative finishes then in use for corrugated iron roofing (Porter, 1847). Galvanising was a little more expensive than the alternatives of three coats of 'the patent white of zinc' or 'the oxide of iron'. By 1855, atmospheric pollution had caused the failure of several galvanised railway station roofs in the North of England, though ship-building slip roofs in Pembroke Dockyard were reported to be in good condition after 10 years service, despite their coastal location (Phillips, 1855). Seaside piers required wear-resistant coatings. Cast iron columns were made oversize to allow for loss of material due to wear and may have to be protected and

Analysis of the layers of paint on an iron structure may form part of an archaeological investigation that enables an earlier colour scheme to be re-created. In some cases, great care was taken in choosing the finish for an iron structure and archive research may prove rewarding. The artist Owen Jones devised a subtle colour scheme for the ironwork in the building for the Great Exhibition of 1851 that was designed to enhance perspective and emphasise the vastness of the interior. For the roof to St. Pancras Railway Station, W H Barlow opted for a muddy brown colour (found recently under more than 50 separate paint layers), deflecting criticism with the comment that it would not show the soot. Examination of paint layers on iron railings in Glasgow's West End has shown that often the original finish was a dark blue-green, also known as 'invisible green', with the now more usual black becoming popular only later in the nineteenth century. Restoration of original colour schemes will not always be appropriate. In the terraces of Edinburgh New Town, black is now universal for railings, thus avoiding variation in the shade of green that might otherwise be adopted. Earlier re-paintings may themselves be of historical interest. A scrape of the Magdalen Green Bandstand, Dundee, revealed what appeared to be camouflage paint. Perhaps the structure served as a wartime lookout post on the banks of the Tay? Cheerful colours were selected for the 1990 restoration in keeping with other surviving examples of brightly painted Victorian ironwork (see Illustrations 2, 3 and 4).

8.10.3 Mairttenance of existing paintwork Repainting of exposed ironwork as a regular maintenance task does not involve the wholesale removal of existing coats of paint. Sound areas of paint may simply be abrasive cleaned to receive a topcoat, paying attention to Health and Safety precautions outlined in Section 8.7.4. For minor areas of damage, preparation involves the removal of rust, including corrosion beneath paint layers, and unsound loose or cracked paint. The surface is then primed before rust can re-form and then suitable undercoats and the topcoat are applied.


Over-coating of paint layers is not always the best solution in the long term. Paint that has been built up in many layers to a considerable thickness is particularly prone to chipping. Relatively large areas around the damage may need to be rubbed down to visually blend in the newly repainted areas with the old. Very thick layers of paint that blunt the decorative features of a casting or obscure the details in intricate forged work should be stripped back. Determining the soundness of existing paint layers and the limits of local corrosion can be difficult. Corrosion spreads outwards beneath a paint surface from areas of local damage. Painting contractors and paint suppliers are therefore understandably reluctant to guarantee their workmanship or materials when surface preparation

does not involve removal of all existing coatings. Finally, stripping down to bare metal exposes any defects and past repairs for inspection and remedial action, prior to repainting. Nonetheless, in view of the potential future interest in the historic paint schemes applied, and as the documentation relating to any paint scrapes may be mislaid, at least a small area of historic paintwork should be kept in an unobtrusive location as a physical record of earlier corrosion protection systems and their maintenance. Before privatisation, British Rail policy was to examine the condition of all its structures at six-yearly intervals. For a railway station roof this involved inspection from

zllustration 270 Queen Street Station, Glasgow: Main train shed roof (1880) Access maintained for railway passengers at platform level (Picture: Network Rail)


SCOTTISHIRON STRUCTURES

platform level. Access provision for painting at twelve yearly intervals enabled closer inspection of less accessible areas (Connell, 1993). In such circumstances, where access for maintenance is difficult and expensive, a paint system with a long life to first maintenance will be appropriate.

8.10.4 Cleaning, surface preparation and paint specifications The preparation of surfaces to receive paint is of paramount importance. When stripping down to bare metal, contaminants to be removed before painting are rust, water-soluble corrosion salts, loose mill scale (but not sound mill scale), old paint, and oil or grease. Mill scale is a brittle, non-metallic skin of oxide on the surface of rolled steel or wrought iron sections, formed on cooling after passing through the mill rolls. It acts as a corrosion resistant layer, as does the surface skin on iron castings formed by fusion of the moulding sand in direct contact with the molten iron. Manual surface cleaning by scraping and brushing is not the most efficient method but may sometimes be the only practical option. When surface preparation is less than perfect, a modem rust inhibiting primer such as zinc phosphate may be preferred. Most paints will not adhere to a damp surface and newly applied paint will be damaged by exposure to a humid atmosphere, so painting outdoors should not be programmed for the winter months. Legislation now prevents the sale of lead-based primers to the general public and testing of existing ironwork surfaces is needed to establish the presence of lead-based paints (BCF, 1998). However, special permission can be obtained for the use of lead-based paints for the repair of Category A-listed buildings. In such cases, the paint supplier will obtain confirmation of the status of the structure from Historic Scotland. Lead particles can be breathed in or swallowed as paint chips, or in contaminated dirt or water, with very serious health consequences. Where lead-based paints are to be removed, very careful planning, control and monitoring is required to ensure the Health and Safety of operatives, users of the building and the public. The main train shed roof to Glasgow's Queen Street Station was encapsulated during recent refurbishment works to enable lead pollutants to be contained and disposed of safely, while allowing the platforms below to remain in use (Illustrations 269 and 270). For the refurbishment of the People's Palace Winter Gardens in Glasgow, following a fire in early 1998, a temporary containment structure was constructed for abrasive blast cleaning of the iron and steelwork (Glasgow City Council, 2000). Smoke tests were

carried out to ensure that a 100% seal was achieved. All personnel within the containment structure wore protective suits and breathing apparatus and lead levels in their blood were monitored. The air quality inside and outside the containment structure was also tested periodically while cleaning was taking place. Great care was taken with the containment and safe disposal of the waste arising from the cleaning operations (Illustrations 27 1 & 272). For smaller buildings, the hazards associated with leadbased paints may be removed from site by dismantling the structure. The separate parts can be cleaned, repaired, and repainted in a factory or workshop, where the risks to health may be more economically managed. Immersion in a bath of dilute sulphuric or phosphoric acid is then an effective method for the removal of rust and loose mill scale. Standard specifications for surface cleanliness and roughness for steelwork should not be used indiscriminately for decorative wrought or cast iron. Wrought iron is softer than steel and heavy-handed grit blasting will remove protective mill scale. For blacksmith's work, flame cleaning may be used provided that the fire risk can be contained. Care must be taken with thinner parts that may distort when heated. Applying heat is also an effective way of loosening rust, as rust expands differentially with respect to iron, and can then be brushed, knocked or shaken off. Probably the least damaging method of cleaning fine wrought iron work is with a proprietary chemical paint stripper, followed by steam cleaning (Topp, 2001). Cleaning of ironwork after applying a chemical paint remover and before applying paint is essential. For castings, the protective skin left by green sand moulding can withstand careful blast cleaning. However, over-aggressive blast cleaning can remove sound caulking and jointing materials, which will then need to be replaced. Blast cleaning of cast iron should use a chemically inert abrasive at low pressure. For fine decorative cast iron work, nylon beads have been successfully used as an abrasive (D S Mitchell, 2001). Selection of a paint system for an iron structure must take into account the conditions of exposure and the planned frequency of maintenance, which will in turn depend on ease of access. For decorative ironwork, which may be viewed close-up, the overall paint thickness must not be too great. The method of surface preparation and the choice of primer may vary for cast iron, wrought iron, and steel. For the subsequent paint layers it is compatibility with the primer, or with each other, that is important. Some specialists in the restoration of architectural cast ironwork dislike the more viscous epoxy based paint systems as they tend to obscure fine details (D S Mitchell, 2001). Such systems are also considered by


Illustration 271 The People's Palace, Glasgow Green, Glasgow: The Winter Garden (1899) An early twentieth century view (Picture: Glasgow City Council)

Illustration 272 The People 's Palace, Glasgow Green, Glasgow: The Winter Garden (1899) Temporary containment structure (Picture: Glasgow City Council)

some to create a hard shell coat not entirely compatible with the porous cast iron beneath, unlike more traditional paint systems. For external cast ironwork, a five coat system has proven satisfactory, with a zinc phosphate primer, an intermediate coat of micaceous iron oxide (MIO) and gloss finish coats. A four coat system used with success for decorative wrought ironwork begins with a zinc phosphate anti-corrosive primer, followed by a micaceous oxide intermediate coat, then two finishing coats applied by brush or spray. For fine external wrought ironwork in particular, great emphasis is placed on, after initial

repair or restoration, 'annual inspection, both rigorous and minute, of every detail of ironwork' (Topp, 2001). hoblems should be attended to at the first opportunity, low-viscosity oil based rust inhibitor may be injected into joints as a temporary measure, and re-painting should be carried out at no more than five-yearly intervals. For larger engineering structures and parts of buildings with poorer access for maintenance, the emphasis will be on life to first maintenance rather than the retention of fine detail. The ironwork to the Winter Garden at the People's Palace was cleaned by abrasive blasting to


a standard better than Sa2'12, in accordance with BS4232, with BS7079 used as the standard to judge cleanliness. The following paint system was used: 1 coat 2 pack epoxy zinc phosphate primer (100 micron dry film thickness), 1 coat 2 pack epoxy high build (100 micron dry film thickness), and 1 coat 2 pack quick drying acrylic urethane gloss (40 micron dry film

thickness). The specification required that the white gloss paint should have a 15 year life to first repair. Unpainted, cast iron can last indefinitely in a benign environment. It was decided not to paint the girders of Braid Bum Bridge, Duddingston, as part of the bridge's conservation (Illustration 127).


9 SOURCES OF INFORMATION AND ADVICE (As at March 2006)

9.1

Introduction

The contact details of public and private organisations that collectively provide information and advice on any aspect of historic iron structures in Scotland are given below. Many of the sources listed have proved useful in the preparation of this Practitioners' Guide. Each sub-section alphabetically lists organisations in Scotland, followed by organisations outside Scotland. Some sources are not easily categorised. For example, the best civil engineering library in Britain is kept by the Institution of Civil Engineers, so it appears with the listing for that organisation under the heading 'Professional institutions and accreditation bodies', rather than under 'Libraries, archives and information services'. Web links are given to 'on line' Internet resources, the scope and usefulness of which is likely to increase greatly over the next few years. Now, archive material can generally be located over the Internet, but in future more printed and manuscript materials will be digitised, for remote viewing. It is already possible, for example, to view freely on line and at high resolution the will of the Scottish civil engineer Thomas Telford (via SCAN'S site scottishdocuments.com) or the architectural drawings for Edinburgh's McEwan Hall and its iron and steel framing (via 'The Drawn Evidence'). Where specialist services and materials are noted below, this information is provided in good faith but the inclusion of any particular firm, individual or product does not imply endorsement by the author of this Practioners' Guide or by Historic Scotland.

9.2

Government and its agencies

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) Belford House, 59 Belford Road, Edinburgh, EH4 3UE Tel 0 131 247 2000 Fax 0131 247 2121 375 West George Street, Glasgow, G2 4LW Tel 0141 275 3000 Fax 0141 275 3100 Web http://www.hse.gov.uk

The mission of HSE is to ensure that risks to people's health and safety from work activities are properly controlled. In 2002, one or two construction industry workers were dying at work every week. The industry targets were to reduce the fatal and major injury rate by 40% in 2005 and by 66% in 2010 but it seems unlikely that these targets will be achieved. Ignorance of good practice is no defence in a court of law. Many HSE publications that relate to construction safety may be downloaded as *.pdf files from the web site, at

These publications include leaflets that explain the duties and role of the Client, the Planning Supervisor, the Designer and the Contractor under the Construction Design and Management Regulations. Other free online publications relate to noise, chemicals and hazardous substances, safety inspection requirements, fire safety, safety in excavations, personal protective equipment, working at height and site welfare facilities. HSE Bookfinder is an on-line catalogue to priced and free HSE printed publications at

Hsedirect, at www.hsedirect.com is a subscription online information service providing access to health and safety legislation and guidance. Within hsedirect, 'COSHH Essentials' is a free aid developed to help firms comply with the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations (COSHH).

Historic Scotland Longmore House, Salisbury Place, Edinburgh, EH9 1SH Tel 0131 668 8600 Fax 013 1 668 8669 e-mail hs.website@scotland.gsi.gov.uk Web http://www.historic-scot1and.g0v.uk/ Historic Scotland is the Agency within the Scottish Executive Education Department that safeguards the nation's built heritage and promotes its understanding and enjoyment. Details of priced and free publications may be obtained on-line.


National Survey of Buildings and Archaeology in Scotland

English Heritage

John Sinclair House, 16 Bernard Terrace Edinburgh, EH8 9NX

Customer Services Department PO Box 569, Swindon, England SN2 2YP

Tel 0131 662 1456 Fax 0131 662 1499 e-mail nmrs@rcahms.gov.uk Web http://www.rcahms.gov.uk/

Tel 0870 333 1181 Fax 0179 341 4926 e-mail mailto:customers@english-heritage.0rg.uk Web http://www.english-heritage.0rg.uk/

The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS) surveys and records the built heritage of Scotland and makes the results available to the public through the Collections of the National Monuments Record of Scotland (NMRS). A great wealth of information and material is held on the sites, monuments and buildings of Scotland's past. CANMORE provides on-line access to the database of the National Monuments Record of Scotland (NMRS). The database contains details of many thousands of archaeological sites, monuments, buildings and maritime sites in Scotland together with an index to the drawings, manuscripts and photographs in the Collections of the NMRS. CANMORE enables this data to be searched by location (place name, area or Ordnance Survey 1:10,000 map sheet) by type (the classification or function of a site, monument or building) or by keywords, such as 'iron'. Data relating to the NMRS Architecture Collections is not fully online at the time of writing.

The Scottish Executive Planning and Building Area 3-H, Victoria Quay, Edinburgh, EH6 6QQ Tel 013 1 244 0763 Fax 0131 244 0785 e-mail (general enquiries) ceu@scot1and.g0v.uk Web http://www.scotland.gov.uW The Development Department of the Scottish Executive advises Scottish Ministers on planning matters and is responsible for policies on building control. The latest information about Building Standards is available, and copies of the standards themselves may be freely downloaded as *.pdf files, via the Scottish Building Agency Home Page at http://wm~v.sbsa.gov.uk/

CADW: Welsh Historic Monuments National Assembly for Wales Cathays Park, Cardiff, Wales, CFIO 3NQ

Tel 0292 050 0200 Fax 0292 082 6375 e-mail cadw @ wa1es.gsi.g0v.uk. Web http://www.cadw.wales.gov.uk/

9.3

Museums and Sites

Bonawe Iron Furnace Situated between the S shores of Loch Etive and the village of Taynuilt, off the A85 (Grid Reference NN0 10318) Tel

01866 822432

The most complete remains of charcoal fuelled ironworks in Britain, with displays illustrating iron making. In the care of Historic Scotland, open summers only. Pictured on the Historic Scotland web site, there are also good internal views of the furnace on the undiscovered scotland website: Web http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/ta

Bo'ness and Kinneil Railway Run by The Scottish Railway Preservation Society (SRPS) Bo'ness Station, Union Street, Bo'ness West Lothian, EH51 9AQ Tel 01506 822298 e-mail enquiries@rai1way.srps.0rg.uk Web http://www.srps.org.uk/

The train shed was relocated from Haymarket, Edinburgh. The Bo'ness Development Trust is working with the SRPS to set up the Scottish Railway Museum, and future building plans include re-erection of one of the 1888 Glasgow International Exhibition buildings (the 'Penman Building') as a display shed at Bo'ness North Yard.


The Dunaskin Open Air Museum (in liqrridation 2005) Dalmellington Rd, Waterside, Patna, Ayrshire e-mail dunaskin@btconnect.com Web http:Nwww.dunaskin.co.uk/ An open-air museum, on the site of the Dalmellington Ironworks, open summers only. Educational material on the web site includes illustrated descriptions of blast furnaces and furnace blowing engines. Currently stores the iron salvaged from the Caird Engine Shop, Arthur Street, Greenock.

East Dunbartonshire Museums The Auld Kirk Museum, The Cross, Kirkintilloch Glasgow, G66 IAB Tel 0141 578 0144 Fax 0141 578 0140 Web http://www.edunbarton.org.uk/whatson/museums/auld -kirk-museum.htm

Falkirk Museums Callendar House, Callendar Park, Falkirk, FK1 1YR Tel 01324 503770 e-mail callendar.house@falkirk.gov.uk (Illustration 275)

Grangemouth Museum Workshop 7 - 11 Abbotsinch Road, Abbotsinch Industrial Estate Grangemouth, FK3 9UX Tel

01324 504689

The collections contain objects from the many iron foundries that were once concentrated in the area, including patterns, tools, machinery and products and also reflect the regional importance of engineering and ship building. Only part of the collection is displayed and viewing of the larger amount of material held at the Grangemouth store is possible by prior appointment. The Archives and History Research Centre at Callendar House hold information on foundries and their products.

National Museums of Scotland Chambers Street, Edinburgh, EH1 1JF Tel 0 131 247 4422 Fax 0131 2204819 e-mail Web http://www.nms.ac.uk/mos/

There are excellent displays relating to iron and steel industries and their products in the Museum of Scotland and the adjoining Royal Museum in Chambers Street.

The Granton Centre 242 West Granton Road, Edinburgh, EH5 1JA Tel 013 1 247 4470 Fax 0131 551 4106 The Granton Centre is the major store for the National Museums of Scotland, holding thousands of objects, including some building and engineering artefacts. Free tours are available.

New Lanark World Heritage Village New Lanark Conservation Trust, New Lanark Mills Lanarkshire, Scotland, MLl l 9DB Tel 01555 661345 Fax 01555 665738 (Visitor Centre) e-mail visit@newlanark.org Web http:Nwww.newlanark.org/ In December 2001 New Lanark became the fourth site in Scotland to be inscribed on UNESCO,s World Heritage List. Structural ironwork is splendidly exposed in several buildings in public access areas and cast iron beams from one building have been re-used to support a bridge across the lade.

Scottish Maritime Museum Harbourside, Irvine, Ayrshire, KA12 8QE Tel 01294 278 283 Fax 01294 313 211 Web http://www.scottishmaritimemuseum.org/ Includes the relocated cast-iron and timber-framed Linthouse Engine Shop, 1873: the largest building to have been moved in Britain.

Summerlee Heritage Park Heritage Way, Coatbridge, Lanarkshire, ML5 1QD Tel 01236431 261 Fax 01236 440 429 Web http://www.monklands.co.ukfleisure/su~ One of Scotland's largest industrial heritage visitor attractions, open all year, on a 22-acre site based around the nineteenth century Summerlee Ironworks. Working machinery is displayed in a large exhibition hall, an 1880s blast furnace is recreated, and reconstructed workshops include a brass foundry and a spade forge.


Amberley Museum Amberley, Amndel, West Sussex, England, BN18 9LT Tel 01798 831370 Fax 01798 831831 e -mail office@amberleymuseum.co.uk Web http://www.amberleymuseum.co.uW An open-air museum concerned with the industrial history of south east England. The Paviours Museum of Roads and Road Making, of general interest to the civil engineer, is housed in a pre-fabricated iron building dating from 1842. The museum also holds a major collection relating to concrete and concrete technology. Beamish: The North of England Open Air Museum Beamish, County Durham, England, DH9 ORG Tel 0191 370 4016 /0191 370 4022 Fax 0191 370 4001 e-mail museum@beamish.org.uk Web http://www.beamish.org.uk/digest.htm The Beamish Photographic Archive houses a collection of over 100,000 historical images from the North East of England dating from the 1860s up to the present day. Also available is a large collection of trade catalogues of suppliers and manufacturers. The catalogues cover everything from kitchen ranges, decorative castings, banners, agricultural implements and tools, sports and pastimes to industrial machinery. The earliest catalogue dates back to c. 1825 though the majority of the catalogues date between 1860 and 1960. The archives can be viewed on weekdays by appointment only. The Black Country Living Museum Tipton Road, Dudley, West Midlands, England, DY l 4SQ Tel 0121 557 9643 Fax 0121 5574242 e-mail info@bclm.co.uk Web http://www.bclm.co.uW An open air site, covering the working of wrought iron and other manufacturing industries of the Black Country, a region of about 400 square miles to the West of Birmingham. Collections include machinery and products from a local rolling mill and an anchor forge, and material relating to the chain, nail, screw, sheet metalworking and glass making industries. Civil engineering material includes documents relating to the Horsley Bridge Company and the mechanical engineering collection includes steam engines, pumps and boilers. Some of the main exhibition spaces are

beneath an impressive cast iron arched roof of 1888, which originally covered swimming baths in Smethwick. Chiltern Open Air Museum Newland Park, Gorelands Lane, Chalfont St. Giles Bucks, England, HP8 4AB Tel 01494871117 e-mail coamuseum@netscape.net Web http://www.coam.org.uW Among over 30 re-erected historic buildings are two small iron structures, both from Walter MacFarlane's Saracen Foundry: a public convenience made in 1906 for a tramway terminus and a 1950s telephone kiosk. A third prefabricated building dating from 1886, timber framed and clad in corrugated iron, is a typical example of the churches and mission rooms erected in the UK in the nineteenth century and also exported around the world. Ironbridge Gorge Museum Coach Road, Coalbrookdale, Shropshire England, TF8 7DQ Tel 01952 432166 Fax 01952 435999 e-mail info@ironbridge.0rg.uk Web http://www.ironbridge.org.uW Foundry work and the rolling of wrought iron are demonstrated at the Blists Hill site (check rolling times in advance of a visit). (Illustration 210). The wrought iron works contains a steam hammer and rolls from the Atlas Forge in Bolton and is housed in a splendid early nineteenth century workshop from the Admiralty Dockyards at Woolwich. The extensive research library (e-mail: library@ironbridge.org.uk), adjacent to the Coalbrookdale Museum of Iron, holds material relating to the iron industry, bridge building, and the life and work of Thomas Telford, for example. (Illustrations 274 and 276). Highlights of the Museum's collections can be viewed at

Auld Kirk Museum cowgate, Kirkintilloch, G66 1AB Tel: 0141 578 0144 Fax: 0141 578 0140 Collection of castings, patterns and archives for Lion Foundry, Southbank and Star Ironworks of Cameron Robertson Ltd.


.-

'W-

Illustration 273 The Iron Bridge (copied at half-scale), Blist's Hill, Imnbridge, CoalbmoMale Uprights cast in 2001 by H Downs & Sons of Huddersfield. The honeycombing is the result of moulding in an open sand bed, in the manner of the originals. This m y have been reduced by spreading loose sand over the top of the molten casting. (Picture: I: Swailes)

9.4

Libraries, archives and information services

The Mitchell Library, Glasgow North Street, Glasgow, G3 7DN Tel 0141 287 2999 e-mail lil@cls.glasgow.gov.uk Web http://www.glasgowlibraries.org/ One of the largest public reference libraries in Europe, and home of the Glasgow City Archives.

William Patrick Library (Information & Archives) 2 West High Street, Kirkintilloch, Glasgow, G66 1AD Tel: 0141 776 8090 Fax: 0 141 776 0408 Kirkintilloch e-mail libraries@eastdunbarton.gov.uk Contains Lion Foundry and Southbank Ironworks archives.

Zllustmtion 27$ Callender House, Falkirk Museums (Picture: I: Swailes)

The National Archives of Scotland Historical Search Room H M General Register House 2 Princes Street, Edinburgh, EH1 3YY Tel 0131 535 1334 Fax 013 1 535 1328 e-mail enquiries@nas.g0v.uk West Search Room, West Register House Charlotte Square, Edinburgh. EH2 4DJ Tel 0131 535 1413 Fax 0131 535 1411 e-mail wsr@nas.g0v.uk Web http://www.nas.gov.uk/ The National Archives of Scotland holds historical records relating to canals, railways, mining, shipbuilding and most other industries, private, business, estate and burgh papers, maps and architectural and engineering plans (Illustration 277). Some material is stored off-site and two days notice is required for viewing. Useful fact sheets downloadable from the web as *.pdf files include 'Buildings' and 'Estate Records'.


Illustration 275 An iron truss of 44 feet span, from Goldsmith's Hall, City of London (c.1830) Relocated to Ironbridge Gorge Museum in 1990 The bottom tie bars are wrought iron and the upper members are cast iron. An ornate plaster ceiling was suspended below the truss, on wrought iron rods. The truss bears a close similarity to a design by Thornas Tredgold (Sutherland, 1979). (Picture: Z Swailes)

Relevant material may be held in other archives in Scotland, or elsewhere in Britain, so before visiting the National Archives of Scotland, a search of the on-line National Register of Archives (below) maintained by the Historical Manuscripts Commission is recommended. The National Archives of Scotland are also a supporter of the Scottish Archives Network, or SCAN (http://www. scan.org.&/) SCAN makes available on-line the catalogues of 51 Archives in Scotland, from Aberdeen City to West Lothian Council and also makes available, at a cost, digital images of wills at http://www.scottishdocuments.com/

The National Library of Scotland George IV Bridge, Edinburgh, EH1 IEW Tel 0131 2264531 Fax 013 1 622 4803 e-mail enquiries@nls.uk Web http://www.nls.uW The catalogue to the main collection of printed materials containing over three million records is available on-line, as is the manuscript collection catalogue. On-line resources include Scottish Bibliographies on-line, and CAIRNS, a combined catalogue searcher for academic and other major libraries across Scotland. National Register of Archives Web http://www.hmc.gov.uk/nra~search~nra.htm The indexes to the NRA can be searched by place name, family name, personal name or corporate name.


The ARCHON Directory Web

Construction Industry Resource Centre Archive (CIRCA)

http://www.hmc.gov.uk~archon/searchesAocresult.asp?Kimrnins Hill, Meadow Lane, Dudbridge lctry=Scotland

Gloucestershire, GL5 5JP

ARCHON contains an on-line directory of over 200 Scottish archives.

Tel

-

A2A Access to Archives Web http://www.a2a.pro.gov.uW An on-line searchable database, including the catalogues of about 200 record offices and other repositories of archives in England. Some material relevant to Scottish buildings and structures is held in England.

The British Library Web http://www.bl.uk/ The British Library Public Catalogue of over ten million items is searchable on-line, as is the catalogue for the Manuscripts collection. Some printed items may be supplied as loans or photocopies. The web site provides links to other library catalogues around the world.

0117 968 7850 (evening) 07966 227 575 (daytime) Fax 01 17 962 6614

A repository, in a mill with timber floors and cast iron columns, for construction products literature and the contents of defunct construction-related libraries, for example the Property Services Agency. The collection contains some pieces of buildings, including a variety of cast iron columns and a c.1820 timber beam 'flitched' with internal iron trussing.

International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property (ICCROM) Via di San Michele 13, Rome, Italy Tel +39 06 585531 e-mail iccrom@iccrom.org Web www.iccrom.org An inter-governmental organisation established in Rome in 1959 with a worldwide mandate to promote the conservation of both movable and immovable

Illustration 276 Edinburgh Post Oflce (1859) Cast iron beam and column details (Picture: National Archives of Scotland) (See also illustration 177)


heritage in all its forms. The library holds 66,000 volumes and 750 periodicals in the field of international cultural heritage preservation. The library catalogue is searchable on-line and for many foreign language publications, including journal papers, an informative abstract in English may be viewed. The web links database provides access to a comprehensive bank of conservation/restoration related international web sites enabling direct access to external resources and research material.

9.5

Trusts, societies and interest groups

The Architectural Heritage Fund Clareville House, 26/27 Oxendon Street London, SW l Y 4EL Tel Fax e-mail Web

0207 925 0199 0207 930 0295 ahfC3ahfund.0rg.uk http://www.ahfund.org.uk/

The Architectural Heritage Fund (AHF) helps to repair and regenerate historic buildings by helping voluntary and community groups, with grants, low-interest loans, and advice. The AHF supports charitable organisations and may help to set up a Building Preservation Trust (BPT) where none exists. A leaflet on BPT's can be downIoaded from the Web, where information on sources of funding can also be found.

The Architectural Heritage Society of Scotland The Glasite Meeting House, 33 Barony Street Edinburgh, EH3 6NX Tel Fax e-mail Web

0131 5570019 01315570049 directorC3ahss.0rg.uk http:llwww.ahss.org.uW

The AHSS is concerned with the protection, preservation, study and appreciation of Scottish buildings. Visits, tours and talks are organised by regional groups. Local cases panels monitor applications for listed building consent, and for planning permission in conservation areas, and offer advice and guidance regarding the applications to the local planning authorities. Publications are the annual journal Architectural Heritage and the twice yearly Magazine.

The Association for Industrial Archaeology c10 School of Archaeological Studies University of Leicester Leicester, England, LE1 7RH Tel Fax e-mail Web

0116 252 5337 01 16 252 5005 aia@le.ac.uk http:/lwww.industriaI-archaeology.org.uk/

Publications are the journal Industrial Archaeology Review, published twice a year, and IA News, a quarterly magazine. The surviving evidence of industrial activity is a focal point and theme, in the UK and abroad.


The Construction History Society

Glasgolv Conservation Trust West

c10 The Chartered Institute of Building Englemere, Kings Ride, Ascot, Berkshire England, SL5 8BJ

30 Cranworth Street, Glasgow, G12 SAG

Tel Fax e-mail Web

01344 630734 01344 630777 pharlow @ciob.0rg.uk http://www.fp.rdg.ac.uk/wkcl/chs/

The Construction History Society disseminates research and information about historical buildings and construction techniques and organises site visits and lectures. Since 1985 the Society has published Construction History, a journal devoted to the study of all aspects of the history of building and construction history. The Society newsletter and various discussion papers are available on-line.

Edinburgh World Heritage Trust

5 Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, EH2 4DR Tel Fax e-mail Web

0131 2207720 0131 220 7730 inf0@ewht.0rg.uk www.ewht.0rg.uk

Tell Fax 0141 339 0092 Web

http:Nusers.colloquium.co.uk/-GLASGOWWESTIho me.htm The GCTW is a registered charity with a remit to conserve and promote the historic West End of Glasgow. In partnership with Glasgow City Council and Historic Scotland, the Trust encourages original research, publishes conservation information and coordinates capital grants for restoration projects. The Trust's West End Conservation Manual is a detailed technical guide, with section 4.0 on 'Ironwork'. A Guide for Appropriate Repairs, Alterations, Decoration and Extensions to Buildings, Gardens and Backcourts in the West End is available on-line and includes a short section on 'Ornamental Railings'.

The National Trust For Scotland Wemyss House, 28 Charlotte Square Edinburgh, Scotland, EH2 4ET Tel 0131 243 9300 Fax 01312439301 e-mail Web http://www.thenationaltrustforscotland.org.uk/

The centre of Edinburgh was designated a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 1995. Established in 1999, the Trust is an amalgamation of the Edinburgh New Town Conservation Committee and the Edinburgh Old Town Renewal Trust and is supported by Historic Scotland and the City of Edinburgh Council. The Trust awards grants for appropriate external repairs, advises central and local government on major policy and development issues and monitors and promotes the World Heritage Site.

The National Trust for Scotland protects and promotes Scotland's natural and cultural heritage for the enjoyment of present and future generations. The Trust cares for several of Scotland's 'great' houses, some with hidden structural ironwork, as well as smaller properties.

The Garden History Society

The Newcomen Society

Christopher Dingwall The Glasite Meeting House, Edinburgh, EH3 6NX

The Science Museum, London, SW7 2DD

TelIFax 0131 557 5717 e-mail conservation@ghsscotland.freeserve.co.uk Web http://www.gardenhistorysociety.org/ One of the main aims of the society is to promote the protection and conservation of historic parks, gardens and designed landscapes, and to advise on their restoration. Some members' interests include garden structures.

Tel/Fax 0207 371 4445 e-mail thomas @newcomen.com http://www.newcomen.com/ Web The world's oldest learned society devoted to the history of engineering and technology. Contact details for the Honorary Secretary to the Scottish Branch are given on the web site. Transactions are published twice a year (a consolidated list of contents and an author index is on the web site, under 'Archives') and members receive the Bulletin three times a year. Other occasional publications are also issued. Meetings are held at the Glasgow Museum of Transport, 1 Bunhouse Road.


The Phoenix Trust 19-22 Charlotte Road, London, England, EC2A 3SG Tel Fax e-mail Web

0207 613 6430 0207 613 6439 thephoenixtrust@princes-foundation.org http://www.thephoenixtrust.org.ukl

Associated with The Prince's Foundation, the Phoenix Trust acquires, repairs and finds new uses for major historic buildings which might otherwise fall into decay or face demolition, for the benefit of the communities in which they stand, and the public at large. Some details of major projects in Scotland at Anchor Mills, Paisley and Stanley Mills, Perthshire (see Structures Index), are given on the web.

The Scottish Civic Trust The Tobacco Merchants House 42 Miller Street, Glasgow, G1 1DT Tel Fax e-mail Web

01412211466 0141 248 6952

The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in Scotland The Glasite Meeting House 33 Barony Street, Edinburgh, EH3 6NX TeVFax 0131 557 1551 e-mail info@spabscotland.freeserve.co.uk Web www.spab.org.uk/scotland SPAB is a pressure group, founded by William Morris of the 'arts and crafts' movement, with the aim of saving old buildings from decay, demolition and damage. What Morris would have thought of the conservation of iron structures and buildings of 'the industrial age' is an interesting question. SPAB members sign up to the 1877 Morris manifesto and receive the quarterly bulletin SPAB News. The Society runs courses on the conservation and repair of traditional building materials, including historic ironwork, organises visits, talks and technical events, and publishes technical pamphlets and information sheets.

The Georgian Group 6, Fitzroy Square, London, WIT 5DX

A voluntary organisation working to raise the quality of the built environment. The Trust maintain the 'Buildings at Risk Register', which is funded by Historic Scotland (see 'SAVE' below, for England and Wales). Regularly up-dated publications include 'The Buildings at Risk Bulletin' and 'Sources of financial help for Scotland's historic buildings'. A directory of local civic societies and amenity groups is published on the Trust's web site.

The Scottish Industrial Heritage Society 22, Alexandra Place Stirling FK8 ION

Tel Fax e-mail Web

0207 387 1720 0207 387 1721 info @ georgiangroup.org.uk http://www.georgiangroup.org.uk/

The Georgian Group campaigns against the neglect, maltreatment and destruction of Georgian buildings, parks and gardens, in England and Wales only, although the work of architects of importance in Scotland, such as the Adam brothers, are of particular interest. A list of publications available for purchase is on-line, as is a listing of the contents of the Georgian Group Journal, from v1 in 1991.

web http://www.sihs.co.uk

Save Britain's Heritage (SAVE)

The Society is concerned to promote the recording and preservation, in situ and in industrial museums, of both unique and representative evidence of Scotland's industrial past. A bulletin and a review are published.

70 Cowcross Street, London, EClM 6EJ

The Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain Pixham Mill, Pixham Lane, Dorking Surrey, England, RH14 1PQ e-mail Web

website@sahgb.0rg.uk http://www.sahgb.org.uk/

A table of contents for the journal Architectural History is available on-line, from volume 1 in 1958.

Tel Fax e-mail Web

0207 253 3500 0207 253 3400 save@btinternet.com httpi/www..savebri~heritage.org/main.hbn

A charitable organisation that campaigns publicly for endangered historic buildings. A list of publications is available on-line, including 'Bright future: the reuse of industrial buildings' (1990). SAVE maintains a register of buildings at risk in England and Wales, while for Scotland a register is maintained by The Scottish Civic Trust.


The Victorian Society 1 Priory Gardens, Bedford Park, London, W4 1TT Tel Fax e-mail Web

0208 994 1019 0208 747 5899 adminQvictorian-society.org.uk http:/lwww.victoriansociety.org.uW

The Victorian Society is concerned with the study and protection of Victorian and Edwardian architecture and other arts, in England and Wales only. A list of publications is available on-line, including a series of booklets 'Care for Victorian Houses', one of which is 'A brief guide to decorative ironwork in Victorian and Edwardian houses' (1994). 9.6 bodies

Professional institutions and accreditation

See also The Institution of Civil Engineers and the Institution of Structural Engineers for the 'CARE' scheme

The AABC Register (Register of Architects Accredited in Building Conservation) 33 Macclesfield Road, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 2AF Tel Fax e-mail Web

01625 523784 01625 548328 info@aabc-register.co.uk www.aabc-register.co.uk

Historic Scotland is represented on the Board of ACCON, a limited company trading as the AABC Register (set up after the failure of the RIBA in 1999 to set up a register). Registration of an individual architect involves assessment of knowledge and experience in the field by two qualified architectural assessors and one non-architect who is informed and interested in building conservation.

COTAC (Conference on Training in Architectural Conservation) The Building Crafts College Kennard Road, Stratford, London, E15 IAH Tel Fax e-mail Web

0208221 1150 0208 22 1 2708 cotac @tcp.co.uk http:llwww.cotac.org.uW

A registered charity concerned with training and education for the protection and preservation of historic buildings and structures. Members of the Conference are institutions with an interest in conservation (there are no individual members). COTAC sets standards for conservation qualifications from craft to professional levels. The website includes listings of degree level and other courses in conservation and an index of conservation-related articles.

The Institute of Historic Building Conservation (IHBC) Jubilee House, High Street, Tisbury, Wiltshire England, SP3 6HA Tel Fax e-mail Web

01747 873 133 01747 871718 adminQihbc.0rg.uk scot1and@ihbc.0rg.uk(Scotland) http:l/www.ihbc.org.uW

Formerly the Association of Conservation Officers (ACO), IHBC is the professional institute representing conservation professionals in the public and private sectors in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Details of degree courses in Building Conservation recognised by the IHBC are given on the web site. It has approximately 1360 members, divided between 15 branches. Members receive a quarterly magazine 'Context'. Some short 'guidance notes' are published freely on the web.

The Institution of Civil Engineers One Great George Street, Westminster London, SWlP 3AA Tel Fax Web

0207 222 7722 0207 222 7500 http:l/www.ice.org.uW

The Library catalogue (100,000 titles) and Publications catalogue are searchable on-line. Full text ICE Proceedings (from 1836 onwards) and Conference papers may be purchased and downloaded. Extensive archives (view by prior appointment). A pamphlet: "Save Engineering Records" is available, giving advice on the preservation of both past and present engineering archives. The Institution's Panel for Historical Engineering Works (PHEW) promotes awareness of our engineering heritage, identifies civil engineering works worthy of recording andlor preserving for posterity and maintains an index of civil engineering works which have been recorded or listed or preserved. PHEW quarterly newsletters from March 1998 are on-line and the Historical Engineering Works Index includes several Scottish iron bridges. ICE and IStructE have established CARE, a register of engineers accredited in conservation. Coincident with the establishment of CARE, an e-mail discussion group, CEHX (the Civil Engineering heritage exchange), was been launched as a forum for those interested in historical and conservation issues in civil and structural engineering, and construction generally. For details, contact: mike.chrimes@ice.org.uk


Local Associations of the ICE in Scotland The Glasgow and West of Scotland Association http:Nwww.ice-westscotland.org.uW The East of Scotland Association http://www.ice-eastscotland.org.uW (with Edinburgh, Dundee and Aberdeen branches) There is a small museum display of civil engineering material at Heriot-Watt University.

The Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland Clydeport, 16 Robertson Street, Glasgow, G2 8DS Tel Fax e-mail Web

01412483721 01412212698 Secretary@iesis.org http://www.iesis.org/

The IESIS, founded in 1857, provides a forum for individual members from engineering and related disciplines to discuss and exchange information, generate ideas, and promote a wider understanding of the role of the engineering profession in society. A programme of meetings and events is published on the web. Members have free access to the academic libraries of Glasgow and Strathclyde Universities, to which the library of the IESIS was donated. Transactions are published annually. A database of papers from 1857 onwards is available to members (though not on-line).

The Institution of Structural Engineers 11 Upper Belgrave Street, London, SWlX 8BH Tel Fax e-mail Web

0207 235 4535 0207 235 4294 rnai1@istructe.0rg.uk http://www.istructe.org.ukl

The international professional body for Structural Engineers, with around 22,000 members, combining the roles of a learned society with that of a qualifying body setting and maintaining standards for professional engineers. The Institution runs a number of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) courses on aspects of appraisal, conservation and refurbishment of existing structures. The journal The Structural Engineer is published twice a month, and past papers can be located via the on-line library database. Library loans to members are free of charge. The IStructE Informed Study Group on the History of Structural Engineering, established in 1972, meets regularly between May and October, details of meetings being notified to members via e-mail. Group membership is mixed, including architects, historians

and surveyors and other enthusiasts, as well as engineers. Structural iron has been a topic of discussion at many meetings and is the semi-obsessive interest of several group members. Short visits to historic sites and works are arranged as well as longer study tours in Britain and abroad. The Scottish Branch has over 1600 members. Details of meetings are published on the Branch web site: Web http:Nwww.istructe.org.uk/branch/Scottis~frameset.as p?BID=6&Name=Scottish ICE and IStructE have established CARE, a register of engineers accredited in conservation. Coincident with the establishment of CARE, an e-mail discussion group has been launched as a forum for those interested in historical and conservation issues in civil and structural engineering, and construction generally. For details, contact: mike.chrimes@ice.org.uk

The International Council of Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) 70 Cowcross Street, London, EClM 6EJ Tel Fax e-mail Web

02075660031 020 7566 0045 admin@icomos-uk.org www.icomos.org/uk/

Created by UNESCO in 1965, ICOMOS is the international authority on monument conservation, independent of governments. ICOMOS advises UNESCO on World Heritage Sites, and promotes international best practice in the conservation and management of cultural heritage through publications, research, conferences and seminars. Details of individual membership of ICOMOS are available online. Contact the author of this Practioners' Guide for details of ICOMOS committee work relating to iron structures.

Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland (RIAS) 15 Rutland Square, Edinburgh, EH1 2BE Tel Fax Web

013 1 229 7545 0131 228 2188 http://www.rias.org.uW

The WAS is the professional institute for chartered architects in Scotland. For short descriptions of each of the excellent RIAS architectural guides to the cities and regions of Scotland, published by the Rutland Press, go to http://~.rias.org.~Uustratededarchitec~~idesshtm


SCOT~ISH IRONSTRUCTURES

The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) 66 Portland Place, London, W 1B 1AD Tel Fax e-mail Web

02075805533 0207 255 1541 info@inst.riba.org http://www.architecture.com/

The RIBA hosts architecture.com, a very extensive web portal for the built environment. The RIBA British Architectural Library is one of the best collections of architectural material in the World. The catalogue includes books, photographs, drawings, manuscripts and a biographical database of architects and is at

and Ireland including contact details, referenced examples of previous work and the qualifications of members of staff. It is searchable by specialist skill and geographical location and each business has been required to meet rigorous criteria which include professional accreditation; the information is regularly updated. To use the Conservation Register, please visit www.conservationregister.com <http://www.conservationregister.com/>

Specialist contractors, service providers 9.7 and research organisations

http://store.yahoo.com/riba-libraryloncat.htm1

Heritage Engineering (The Industrial Heritage Company Ltd)

The Royal Institution of Chartered S U N ~ ~ O (RICS) B

(Incorporates Walter MacFarlane and Company Limited, and Saracen Castings) 22-24 Carmyle Avenue, Glasgow, G32 8HJ

RICS Contact Centre, Surveyor Court, Westwood Way, Coventry CV4 8JE Tel e-mail Web

Tel Fax e-mail Web

0870 333 1600 contactrics@ rics.org http://www.rics.org/building~conservation/

The RICS Building Conservation Forum runs an accreditation scheme for surveyors in conservation. The forum publishes a regular series of short guides on issues on matters related to historic buildings, and runs a programme of events for members. Advice on-line includes guidance on 'surveying safely', covering risk assessments with respect to premises, personal safety and the safety of the public, and the legal obligations of the surveyor.

A firm that specialises in the restoration of cast and wrought iron and has restored many Scottish ironframed structures, from drinking fountains to conservatories and Winter Gardens. As well as providing contract services, advice and guidance is given on a consultancy basis.

Scottish Foundries Web

http:Nwww.scottishfoundries.co.uW

The web site claims to give comprehensive and up to date details of every Scottish Foundry (in May 2005, there were 24). There is a link to a sister web site for the whole of the United Kingdom. The Scottish companies listed below collectively have experience of cast iron in its various architectural and structural forms.

The Institute of Conservation (ICON) 3rd Downstream London SE1 9BG

0141 763 0007 01417630583 sales@heritageengineering.com http://www.heritageengineering.com/

London Bridge

Tel020 7785 3805 Fax0207785 3806 Web <http:Nwww.instituteofconservation.org.uk> Icon brings together over three thousand individuals and organisations. Its membership embraces the wider conservation community, incorporating not only professional conservators in all disciplines, but all others who share a commitment to improving understanding of, and access to, our cultural heritage. The Institute aims to advance knowledge and education in conservation and achieve the long term preservation and ~ o ~ ~ ~ e r v aof t i ocultural n heritageICON also maintains the Conservation Register. The Conservation Register provides detailed information on conservation-restoration businesses based in the UK

Ballantine Bo'ness Iron Co. Ltd Links Road, Bo'ness, EH51 9 p w Tel

01506822721 01506 827326 e-mail info@creativeironworks-cO-uk Ironfounders and engineers providing new ironwork and refurbishment to existing ironwork. Over 250,000 patterns are held, including fencing, monuments, post boxes, lamp posts, manhole covers and extensive ornamental structures.

171


Charles Laing & Sons Ltd

The Building Research Establishment (BRE)

28 Beaverbank Place, Edinburgh, EH7 4ET

Garston, Watford, England, WD25 9XX

Tel Fax e-mail Web

Tel e-mail Web

0131 5563160 0131 556 2484 admin@laingsfoundry.co.uk www.laingsfoundry.co.uk

A traditional small green sand foundry, able to supply new decorative ironwork and restore original examples of architectural ironwork.

George Taylor & Co. (Hamilton) Ltd Kemp Street, Hamilton, ML3 6PQ Tel Fax e-mail Web

01698 284949 01698 891285 office@gtham.co.uk www.gtham.co.uk

A foundry specialising in the production of spheroidal graphite (ductile) and grey (flake graphite) iron castings up to 3 tonnes that has supplied ductile iron castings for use in bridge works.

Carnoustie Castings Ltd 2a Anderson Street, Carnoustie, DD7 7LZ Tel Fax

01241 859920 01241 856233

A jobbing foundry. Architectural ironwork castings have included balustrades, balconies, window frames and rainwater goods.

Archibald Young Ltd Founders and Engineers, Milton Road Kirkintilloch, G66 1SY Tel Fax e-mail Web

0141 776 7701 01417751743 ianyoung@archibaldyoung.co.uk www.archibaldyoung.co.uk

Specialist in copper-based aluminium and iron alloys from O.lkg to 1 tonne in weight.

British Coatings Federation Ltd James House, Bridge Street, Leatherhead Surrey, England, KT22 7EP Tel Fax e-mail Web

01372 360660 01372 376 069 mail@coatings.org.uk http://www.coatings.org.uk

01923 664 000 enquiries@bre.co.uk http://www.bre.co.uk!

BRE Scotland Kelvin Rd, East Kilbride, Glasgow, G75 ORZ Tel Fax e-mail

01355 576200 01355 576210 eastkilbride@bre.co.uk

A leading centre of expertise on buildings and materials (particularly concrete, masonry and timber), construction, energy, environment, fire and risk, and a provider of research-based consultancy, materials testing and certification services.

Castings Technology International 7 East Bank Road, Sheffield, England, S2 3PT Tel Fax Web

0114 272 8647 0114 273 0852 http://www.castingsdev.com/

CTI is a membership-based limited company that cames out research and development relevant to the manufacture and use of metal castings and provides technical services to its members. It was formed in a merger that involved the British Cast Iron Research Association (BCIRA). Services include nondestructive testing, chemical analysis, metallographic examination and mechanical testing.

The Construction Industry Research and Information Association (CIRIA) 6 Storey's Gate, London, SWlP 3AU Tel Fax e-mail Web

0207 222 8891 0207 222 1708 enquiriesC9ciria.0rg.uk www.ciria.0rg.uk

CIRIA is a research association with 500 corporate members that carries out collaborative research and publishes technical reports. Interim reports of current CIRIA research projects can be found on the web site.


SCOTTISH IRONSTRUCTURES

SCI is an independent member-based organisation that operates a technical advice service, principally concerned with modern steel structures, free to corporate members. Some publications (such as P138: Appraisal of Existing Iron and Steel Structures, on which SCI runs a one day CPD course) are available to members on-line via Steelbiz.

Dorothea Restorations Ltd New Road*W h a l e ~Bridge*High Peak* England, SK23 7JG Tel Fax e-mail Web

01663 733544 01663 734521 north@dorothearestorations.com http:Nwww.dorothearest.co.uk/

A long-established firm specialising in restoration, conservation and preservation in the fields of engineering and architectural metalwork. As well as providing contract services, advice and guidance is given on a consultancy basis.

The Paint Research Association

C/OThe National Trust for Scotland 28 Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, EH2 4ET Tel Fax e-mail

0 131 243 9449 013 1 243 9599 dmcdonaldC3nts.0rg.uk

The Traditional Paint Forum was founded to promote a better understanding and appreciation of traditional paint. It promotes its aims by exchanging, collating and disseminating information through the publication of a regular newsletter, journal, and by holding meetings and conferences.

8 Waldegrave Road, Teddington, Middlesex England, TW l l 8LD Tel Fax e-mail Web

The Traditional Paint Forum

0181 977 4427 0181 943 4705 coatingsC3pra.0rg.uk http://www.pra.org.uk

The Transport Research Laboratory (TRL) The Real Wrought Iron Company

Old Wokingham Road, Crowthorne, Berkshire England, RG45 6AU

Carlton Husthwaite, Thirsk, North Yorkshire, England Tel Fax e-mail Web

01845 501415 01 845 501072 enquiry@realwroughtiron.com http://www.realwroughtiron.coml

Suppliers of genuine wrought iron to blacksmiths, and for use in the restoration of historic ironwork. The material is available in square, round or flat bar form or in plates of up to '12 inches thick. More complex shapes such as glazing bars may be rolled if economical for the quantity required, or forged. Advice on-line is given via the Wrought Iron Advisory Centre,

http://www.realwroughtiron.com/wiac.htm A sister company with the same contact details, Chris Topp & Co., gives advice and guidance on all aspects of iron and forgework, including wrought iron, cast iron and steel

http://www.christopp.co.uk/index.html The Steel Construction Institute Silwood Park, Ascot, Berkshire, England, SL5 7QN Tel Fax e-mail Web

01344623345 01344 622 944 receptionC3steel-sci.com http://www.steel-sci.org/

Tel 0 1344 770007 Fax 01344 770880 e-mail enquiries@trl.co.uk Edinburgh office e-mail scotland@trl.co.uk Web http://www.trl.co.uk/1024/mainpage.asp TRL is the leading UK centre for transport research, with around 500 staff, with work that includes an involvement in the development of design and assessment rules for bridge structures. The catalogue of all TRL publications is downloadable from the web as a *.pdf file and there is a searchable on-line catalogue of reports from 1966 onwards.

TWI (The Welding Institute) Granta Park, Great Abington, Cambridge England, CB1 6AL Tel Fax e-mail Web

01223 891162 01223 892588 twi@twi.co.uk http://www.twi.co.uk/j32Windex.xtp

TWI is an independent research and technology organisation and describes its website as the world's most extensive on-line source of information and advice on welding and joining of engineering materials, including cast iron, wrought iron and steel. Training and certification of operatives and companies is also undertaken.

173


Illustration 277 Part of a drawing for the University of Glasgow prepared in 1806 by Peter Nicholson (Picture: The Drawn Evidence. The University of Glasgow Archive Services))


9.8

Other internet information resources

aecportico Web http://www.aecportico.co.uW A non-profit portal site providing information of relevance to the UK construction industry free of charge. aecportico is owned and run by NBS, a part of RlBA Enterprises Ltd, and wholly owned by the Royal Institute of British Architects. The Building Conservation Directory Web http://www.buildingconservation.com/ The on-line version of the Directory includes products and services for over a thousand companies and other organisations. Useful short illustrated articles in the Directory and its sister publications (available on-line in May 2005) included the following:

kit of parts from Walter MacFarlane's Saracen foundry in Glasgow. Topp, C. (1994), 'Wrought iron and conservation', The Building Conservation Directory.

Web:http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/ wrought/wrought.htm Taylor, J. and Suff, S. (2000), 'Wrought ironwork', The Building Conservation Directory.

Web:http://www.buildingconservation.com/rticles/ Hume, I. (1997), 'Scaffolding and temporary works for historic buildings', - The Building Conservation Directory. Web:http:Nwww.buildingconservation.com/aticle~/s caffold/scaffold.htm

Construction Plus Web:http://www.constructionplus.co.uW Broomfield, J. (1996), 'The repair of reinforced A subscription portal site-based partly on the concrete', The Building Conservation Directory. information assets of publisher Emap's magazines Web:http:Nwww.buildingconservation.com/articlesl The Architects Journal, Construction News and New concrete/concrete.htm Civil Engineer.

Taylor, J. (1999), 'Nails and wood screws', The Drawn Evidence The Building Conservation Directory. Web:http://www.drawn-evidence.dundee.ac.uW Web:http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/ A searchable virtual archive of Scottish architectural nailslnails.htm plans, drawings and related material developed by the University of Dundee, with 10,000 highTaylor, J. (2000), 'Nuts and bolts: an introduction to resolution digitised images and supporting text conservation and repairs', Historic Churches. (Illustration 278). Web:http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/ nuts/nuts.htm Edinburgh Engineering Virtual Library (EEVL) Web;http:l/www.eevl.ac.uW Taylor, J. (1995), Victorian and Edwardian terracotta A focal point for free on-line access to information buildings', The Building Conservation Directory. on engineering, mathematics and computing, Web:http:Nwww.buildingconservation.com/articles/t principally for students and academic researchers. erracot/terracot.htm Under the Engineering Portal Project, EEVL Cornell, J. (2003), Conserving Railway Heritage Engineering will evolvk into a portal from which Web:http//www.buildingconservation.com/a multiple databases can be searched. ailways/railways.htm Gazetteer for Scotland Sims, T. (1997), 'Cold metal stitching of historic Web:http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/scotgaz/ metalwork', The Building Conservation Directory. A geographical database, searchable by 'maps and Web:http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/s places' or by 'history time line', the Gazetteer is titch/stitch.htm claimed to be the largest Scottish resource on the web. Clement, P. (1997), 'Metal windows', The Building Conservation Directory.

The US National Parks Service

Web:http:/lwww.buildingconservation.com/icles/

Web:http://www.cr.nps.gov/buildings.htm

metalwin/metalw.htm

Several full-text and colour-illustrated guides available on-line are at least to some extent concerned with structural iron. The guides contain a great deal of valuable information, although with historic buildings in America.

Wallis, G. (1995), 'The reconstruction of Coombe Cliffe conservatory', The Building Conservation Directory. Web:http://www.buildingconservation.com/icles/ coombe/coombe.htm A conservatory built in 1894, as an extension to a house at Coombe Cliffe, Croydon, was a cast iron

Jandl, H.W. (1982), 'Rehabilitating historic storefronts', Preservation Brief 11 Web:http://www2.cr.nps.gov/tps/briefs/brefll .htm


Park, S.C. (1988), 'The use of substitute materials on historic building exteriors', Preservation Brief 16 Web:http:Nwww2.cr.nps.gov/tpslbriefslbriefl6.htm Waite, J.G. (1991), 'The maintenance and repair of architectural cast iron', Preservation Brief 27

Web:http:Nwww2.cr.nps.gov/tps/briefs/brief27.htm This Preservation Brief was developed by the New York Landmarks Conservancy's Technical Preservation Services Centre under a co-operative agreement with the National Park Service's Technical Preservation Services, and with partial funding from the New York State Council on the Arts. Park, S.C. (1993), 'Mothballing historic buildings', Preservation Brief 3 1 Web:http://www2.cr.nps.gov/tps/briefs/br l .htm McDonald, T.C. (1994), 'Understanding old buildings: the process of architectural investigation', Preservation Brief 35. Web http://www2.cr.nps.gov/tps/briefs/brief35.htm National Parks Service: Illustrated guidelines for rehabilitating historic buildings: The Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation & Illustrated Guidelines for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings Metals (do's and don'ts for the treatment of historic architectural metalwork) Web:http://www2.cr.nps.gov/tps/tax/rhb/metalsO l .htm

scottishironwork.org Web

http://www.scottishironwork.org/

The website provides information for those interested in wrought and cast ironwork manufactured or found in Scotland. Resources available include historical information, an online database, technical area and special features.


REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING

Adams, H. (c.l907), 'Cassellk Engineers' Handbook', Cassell & Co., London. p175-182, for 'Forging, welding, riveting, etc'. Adams, H. (c.1920), 'Cassell S Building Construction', special edition, The Waverley Book Co., Ltd, London. p326, 328, 'Dawnay's Fireproof Floor'. Aitkin, A. (1826), 'Process of piiddling iron, as practised at the Lightmore ironworks, in Shropshire', Mechanic's Magazine, v6, p78-79. Allen, Gordon & Co. (2001), 'Building conservation report on the Ferglisson Gallery, Marshal1 Place, Perth '. Allwinkle, S, et al. (1997), 'Fire protection measitres in Scottish Historic Buildings', Historic Scotland, Technical Conservation, Research and Education Division, Technical Advice Note 11. Angus, H.T. (1976), 'Cast iron: physical and engineering properties', Buttenvorths, 2nd edition, London. A comprehensive work. Note Chapter 8 'Cast Iron Beams and Columns', is rather out-ofdate. Mechanic's Magazine (1828), ' Brunswick Theatre roof collapse', News reports and correspondence, v9, p94, 110-125, 135-139, 153-155, 173-174, and 201204. Anon. (1830), 'On the strength of cast iron', Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine, v3, p69-7 1. Architecture Today (2001), 'Renewing the Sefon Park Palm House', Architecture Today, n21, p78-82. Arnold, D. (2002), 'Cast iron roof beam failure raises fears for nineteenth century houses', New Civil Engineer, 8/15 August, p12; 22/29 August, p8; 21 November, p5. Ashurst, J. Ashurst, N. and Wallis, G. (1988), 'Technical Handbook, v4, Metals', 'English Heritage Practical Building Conservation Series, Gower Technical Press. Badoux, M. and Sparks, P. (1998), 'Fracture critical study of an historic wrought iron bridge', Structural Engineering International, n2, p136 - 139. Barker, R. (ed). (1992), 'Wilkinson Studies, v2', Merton Priory Press.

Barlow, P. (1837), 'A treatise on the strength of timber, cast iron, malleable iron and other materials; with rules for application in architecture, construction of suspension bridges, railways, etc.' John Weale, London, 5th edition (first published 1817). Barnfield, J.R. and Porter, A.M. (1984), 'Historic Buildings and Fire: fire pe$ormalzce of cast iron structural elements', The Structural Engineer, v62A, n12, December, p373-380. Barrett, J. (1852-3), 'On the construction offire-proof buildings', Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, v12, p244-272. Barrett, J. (1854), 'On the French and other methods of constr~tctingfireproofjloors',paper to the RIBA 23rd January 1854, reported fully in Civil Engineer & Architect's Journal, v17, p90-98, 129-134. Bateman, D. (1999), 'Historic structures: Protecting our Piers', The Structural Engineer, v77, n13, 6th July, p16-22. Bates, W. (1984), 'Historical Structural Steelwork Handbook', British Constructional Steelwork Association, publication 11/84. Baxter, A. (1984), 'New Concordia Wharf: fire engineering aspects', Architects' Journal, 4 July, v180, n27, p58. Blakelock, R, Munson, S.R. and Yeoell, D. (1998), 'The refurbishment of Westminster Bridge: assessment, design and precontract planning ', The Structural Engineer, v76, n10, 19th May, p189-194. BCF Ltd (c.1998), 'Old lead painted su$aces: a guide on repainting and removal for DIY and professional painters and decorators', British Coatings Federation Ltd. Beaumont, W. W. (1880), 'Modern steel as a str~ictural material', Transactions of the Society of Engineers, October 4th. Beckmann, P. and Bowles, R. (2004), 'Structural aspects of building conservation', 2nd ed'n, Butterworth Heinemann. Bellhouse, D.R. (1991), 'David Bellhoitse & Sons, Manchester', Published by the author, London, Ontario, Canada. A second edition is available on-line at Http://www.stats.uwo.calfaculty/bellhouse/belllhous ehistory.htm


Berkley, G. (1870), 'On the strength of iron and steel, and on the design of parts of structures which consist of those materials', Min. Proc. ICE, v30, Pt. 11, p 2 1 5 275. Wrought iron chain links, the terminal pin and eye connections; fatigue of wrought iron; wrought iron struts; cast iron beams; Bessemer steel - tests by Kirkaldy & the ICE Steel Committee. Bessemer, H. (18561, 'Metal beam and girders'. patent dated October 17 1855, extracts in Civil Engineer & Architect's Journal, v19, p242. The patent predates the invention of the 'Bessemer converter' and the use of puddled steel. -proposed Biddle et al. (1983), 'The Railway Heritage of Britain', Michael Joseph, London. With John R. Hume as main author for railways in Scotland. Blakiston, J. (1970), 'Jamaican castings, old and new', Foundry Trade Journal, 14th May, p831-833. Describes the 80 ft span cast iron arch bridge over the Rio Cobre, near Spanish Town, Jamaica, made in 1800 at the Walker's Yorkshire foundry to the design of Thomas Wilson and erected in 1801-2.

BS 7913 (1988), 'Guide to the principles of the conservation of historic buildings', British Standards Institution. Clause 5.2 Application of standards and codes of practice. Buchanan, A. and Jones, S.K. (1980), 'The Balmoral Bridge of I.K. Brunel', Industrial Archaeology Review, v4, n3, Autumn, p214-226. (The) Builder (1865). .Fall o f a new sugar Leith', News Report, v23, March 4th, p159.

at

Bulson, P.S. et a1 (ed.) (1983), 'Engineering Structures: developments in the twentieth century', University of ~ r i s t oPress. l Ch 3 by Cullimore, MIS.G. '~oint' for Metal Structures', p49 - 75. Bussell, M.N. (1996), 'The era of the proprietary reinforcing systems', Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers (Structures and Buildings), v1 16, p295-3 16. Bussell, M.N. (1997), 'Appraisal of Existing Iron and Steel Structures', SCI Publication 138, The Steel Construction Institute.

Bland, R. (1984), 'Brittle failure of wrought iron beams', (Letter to Verulam), The Structural Engineer, and private communication with the author in 2000.

Bussell, M.N. and Robinson, M. (1998), 'Investigation, appraisal and re-use of a cast-iron structural frame', The Structural Engineer, v76, n3, 3rd February, p3742.

Bolton, A. (1992), 'Strength on a plate', New Civil Engineer, 19th November, cover & p16-17. Steel strengthening and stiffening plates epoxy-bonded to iron members of Telford's1826 Tewkesbuly.

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Fitzgerald, R.S. (1980), 'Liverpool Road Station, Manchester: an architectural and historical survey', Manchester University Press (in association with RCHME and the GMC), p22-28, Water Street, Manchester, Hodgkinson beams in a cast iron girder underbridge.

Guthrie, J.L, Allen. A. & Jones, C.R. (1988), 'Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: Restoration of Temperate House', and ' 'Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: Restoration of Palm House', Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, part 1, v84 p1 1091191, incl. discussion.

Friedman, D. (1995), 'Historical Building Constrriction'. W.W. Norton & Co., New York focuses on New York.

Hamilton, S.B. (1941), 'The use of cast iron in building', Transactions of the Newcomen Society, v21, p139-155.

Gale, W.K.V. (1965), 'The rolling of iron', Transactions of the Newcomen Society, v37, p35-46.

Gale, W.K.V. (1981), 'Ironworking', Shire Album 64, Shire Publications Ltd, repr. 1994. well illustrated concise descriptions of all the main processes.

Hamilton, S.B. (1949), 'Old cast-iron structures', The Structural Engineer, p173-191. Hamilton's papers are significant as the first general reviews of the structural use of iron published in the twentieth century. The Carron Works is mentioned, but no Scottish examples of structures are given. The papers pre-date the 'rediscovery' of the work of Strutt and Bage.

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Glasgow CC. (2000), 'The retlirn of the Winter Garden to the people of Glasgow', Glasgow City Council. GWCT (1993), 'Conservation Manual, Section 4 Ironwork: Man~lfacture, installation and repair of ornamental cast iron', Glasgow West Conservation Trust. Includes a further reading list for Architectural cast iron and relevant Glaswegian and Scottish industrial history. Gloag, J. & Bridgewater, D. (1948), 'A history of cast iron in arckitectlire', George Allen & Unwin, London. Gloag, J. (1970), 'Mr Lo~idon'sEngland', Oriel Press. p45-51, Chapter 4, for Loudon's structural experiments and inventions. Gomme, A. & Walker, D. (1968), 'Architecture of Glasgolv', Lund Humpries, London. Grampian Regional Council Department of Roads. (1994),'Report to the Carron Bridge Local Public Inquiry'. GLC (1976), Bulletin No. 91 (2nd series) item 7 'Cast iron columns and beams', Greater London Council. Griffiths9 Pugs1e~7A. and Saunders, O' 'Report of the inquiry into the collapse of flats at Ronan Point, Canning Town', HMSO, London.

Gun; D. and Hunt, J. (1989), 'The cotton mills of Oldham', Oldham Leisure Services, 2nd edition.

HSE (1990), 'Evaluation and inspection of buildings and structures', Health and Safety Series booklet HS(G)58, HMSO. HSE (1999), 'Cast iron colrimns in buildings: the dangers of collapse from powered vehicle collision', Health and Safety Executive Information Sheet MISC157. Henham, B. (2000), 'True Hero: the life and times of James Braidwood, father of the British Fire Service', Braidwood Books, Romford. Herbert, G. (1978), 'Pioneers of prefabrication: the British contribution in the nineteenth century', Johns Hopkins University Press. Heyman, J. (1982), 'The masonry arch', Ellis Horwood. Chapter 6: an example of a cast iron arch (Magdalene Bridge, Cambridge) and an example of a wrought iron arch. Historic Scotland (2000), ' A Guide to the Preparation of Conservation Plans', Historic Scotland. Hodgkinson, E. (1831), 'Theoretical and Experimental Researches to Ascertain the firengrh and Best Form of Iron Beams', Memoirs of the Literary and Philosophical Societv of Manchester, second series. vs.


Hogg, C.P. (1882), 'On St. Enoch Railway Station', Transactions of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland, v25, p193 - 204, discussion v26, 1882-3, 33 - 34, + 3 plates. Hooper, H.R. (1888), 'The practice of foundry work', Transactions of the Society of Engineers, p191-220, plate I. Howard, T. (1849), 'Description of a method for rolling bars for suspension bridges and other similar purposes', Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, v8, p273. Hume, I. (1992), 'Floor loadings and historic buildings', English Heritage Conservation Bulletin, issue 18, Oct, pl-2. Points out the folly of using 'blanket' floor loads over 2.5 kN/m2 when assessing most historic buildings for new uses. Hume, I. (1997), 'The structural engineer in conservation', The Structural Engineer, v75, n3, 4th Feb, p33-37. Hume, J. R. (1974), 'The Industrial Archaeology of Glasgow', Blackie. Hume, J. R. (1976-7), 'Industrial Archaeology of Scotland. v l : The Lowlands and the Borders, v2: The Highlands and Islands', Batsford. Hume, J. R. (1978), 'Cast Iron and Bridge Building in Scotland', Industrial Archaeology Review, vII, n3, Summer, p290 - 299. Hume, J. R. (19891, 'Scotland's Industrial Past', National Museums of Scotland.

IStructE (1996), 'Appraisal of Existing Structures', 2nd edition, Institution of Structural Engineers. IStructE (1999), 'Guide to the structural use of adhesives', Institution of Structural Engineers. Iron and Steel Institute (1885), 'Visits and Excursions', Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute, v27, p513528. Brief reports of visits to works around Glasgow including: Hallside Steel Works, Dalzell Steel & Iron Works, Mossend Iron and Steel Works, Blochairn Works, Clydebank Shipbuilding and Engine Works, R. Napier & Sons Shipbuilding Works, John Elder & Co.'s Shipbuilding Works, The Glengarnock Iron and Steel Works, The Carron Works. Recreation for the party of 800 included a Firth of Clyde cruise on David MacBrayne's paddle steamer Columba. Jackson, A.A. (1969), 'London Termini', David & Charles. p250-1, Charing Cross roof collapse in 1905, with 6 fatalities. Jackson, A.A. (1997), 'The development of the steel framed building between 1875 and 1905, with reference to stnictural design and conservation issues', MA dissertation (ConservationStudies), University of York. Jackson, A.A. (1998), 'The development of steel framed buildings in Britain, 1880-1905', Construction History, vol. 14, p21-40. James, J.G. (1979), 'Thornas Wizson's cast-iron bridges, 1800-1810', Transactions of the Newcomen Society, v50, p55-72. Jenkin, R. (1918), 4Boilermaking., The Engineer, 19 July, p52. ~

Hurst, B.L. (1996), 'Concrete and the structural use of cements in England before 1890J,Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers (Structures and Buildings), v1 16, p283-4. Hutcheson, E. (1879), 'Girder making and the practice of bridge building in wrought iron', E. & F.N. Spon, London. Ingle, F. (1866), 'Fire-proof constructions', Paper to the British Association, summarised in Engineering, v2, p158-160. Institution of Civil Engineers Panel for Historical Engineering Works (PHEW) (19991, 'Bilston Glen Viaduct', PHEW Newsletters, 1181, March 1999 and n89, March 2001. Institution of Civil Engineers Panel for Historical Engineering Works (PHEW) (2000). 'Tickford Bridge', PHEW Newsletter, 1188, December. IStructE (1988). 'Stabiliry of Buildings', Institution of Structural Engineers. IStructE (1991), 'Guide to surveys and inspections of buildings and similar structures', Institution of Structural Engineers.

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Jones, D.S. and Oliver, C.W. (19729, 'The practical aspects of load testing' The Structural Engineer, December, 1112, v56A, p353-356. Kelsall, F. (1991), 'Hartley Sfireplates', in 'Report of History Group Activities', The Structural Engineer, 'Structural News', p3, 5th November. Kennedy, A.B.W. (1880), 'Mild Steel' and its applications to building purposes', Trans. RIBA, p162-172. See also Picton, 1880. Kirby, B.R, Lapwood, D.G, and Thomson, G. (1986), 'The reinstatement of fire damaged steel and iron framed smlcrures9, British Steel Corporation, Swinden Laboratories, Rotherham. Kirkaldy, D. (1863), 'Results of an experimental inquiry into the tensile strength and other properties of various kinds of wrought iron and steel., 2nd edition, Glasgow. of wrought iron as a N. (1996), structural material', UMIST MSc Dissertation.


Lawford, G.M. (1890), 'Fireprooffloors', Transactions of the Society of Engineers Reported in The Engineer, April 19th 1889, p326.

McQuillan, D. (1992), 'Dredge suspension bridges in Northern Ireland: history and heritage', The Structural Engineer, v70, n7, 7th April, p1 19-126.

Lecount, P. (1839), ' A practical treatise on the railways, explaining their construction and management', Adam & Charles Black, Edinburgh. For forms of rail see p79 - 111.

Measom, G. (1859), 'The OfSicial illustrated guide to the Lancaster and Carlisle, Edinburgh and Glasgow, and Caledonian Railways', W.H. Smith, London.

Leslie, J. and Paxton, R.A. (1999), 'Bright Lights: the Stevensorz Engineers 1752 - 1971', Published by the authors - contact Professor R.A. Paxton, Civil and Offshore Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, EH14 4AS. Lloyd, R.M. and Wright, H.D. (1992), 'In situ testing of a conzposite floor system', The Structural Engineer, 16 June, n12, v70, p21 1-219. Lovejoy, E.G. (1988), 'Cast iron col~lmnsin buildings - hazard from materials handling vehicles', Health and Safety Executive, Specialist Inspectors Report 12. Lowson, W.W. (1967), 'The reconstr~lction of the Craigellachie Bridge', The Structural Engineer, v45, nl, Jan. MacFarlane (1882), 'MacFarlane S Castings (catalogrte)', reprinted 1992, Historical Arts and Castings Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah. Mair, C. (1988), 'Mercat Cross and Tolbooth: ~lnderstandingScotland? old burghs', John Donald, Edinburgh. Marindin, EA. (1882), 'Report to the Secretary (Raihvay Department) Board of Trade, Great North of Scotland Railway', 24th September. i o iron as now Matheson, E. (1867), 'On the q ~ ~ a l of used', Society of Engineers, p1 68-195. Matheson, E. (1873), 'Works in iron: bridge and roof str~lctures',E. & F.N. Spon, London. Matheson, E. (1882), 'Steel for Stnlctures', Min Proc ICE, v69, Pt.111, pl-78. Matheson, E. (1886). 'Steel', Professional Papers of the Corps of Royal Engineers, v12, p159-207, and plates I to V. McConnel, J.E. (1843), 'Report of trials of axles, made at the Birminglzain and Glo~~cester Railway Station', Institution of Civil Engineers, Manuscript 673, 22nd September. McDonald, M.R. (ed.) (1996), ' A G~tideto Scottish Ind~lstrial Heritage', Scottish Industrial Heritage Society. McGrath, G. (1999), 'Adlzesive metal bonding no longer stuck with past prejudices', Welding and Metal Fabrication, v67, n9, October, p20, 22-3.

Menzies, J.B. (1978), 'Load testing of concrete building structures', The Structural Engineer, December, n12, v56A, p347-353. Ministry of Transport (1953), 'Report on tlze collapse of No. 2 Parkhouse Road overbridge which occurred on 26th April 1953 at Ardrossan in the Scottish Region, British Railways', HMSO. Minter, S, et al. (1990), 'The greatest glass house: the rainforests recreated', The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, HMSO, 1990. Chapters 11 to 16 deal with structural aspects of the Palm House and its conservation and are recommended reading. Mitchell, D.S. (of Heritage Engineering Ltd) (2001), 'General guidance notes for cast iron'. Mitchell, G.S. (2001), 'Collection and analysis of nineteenth century building failures', unpublished UMIST 3rd year MEng Civil Engineering investigative project. Moreland, R. (1868), 'Iron and concrete flooring', Engineering, v5, p5 1. Moreland, R. (1884), 'Constructional ironwork for buildings', Min. Proc. ICE, (Student paper 176), p281-296. Morgan, J.E. (1992), 'S.S. Great Britain; The wrought iron ship metal and materials' (Journal of the ~nstitutebfMetals) v8, December, p655-659. Morgan, J.E. (1996), 'The wrought iron of the S.S. Great Britain; an overview of properties in design and renovation '. Morgan, J.E. (1999), 'The strength of Victorian wro~~ght iron', Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers (Structures and Buildings), November, ~ 3 4p295-300. , Morgan, S.K. and Heathorn, T.J. (1981), 'A study of the design and construction and a structural analysis of Magdalene Bridge, Cambridge', The Structural Engineer, v59A, August, p255-262. A cast iron arch bridge built in 1823 to the design of architect Arthur Browne, see also Heyman,1982. ~

~

Moss, M.S. and Hume, J.R. (1977), 'Workshop of the British Empire: engineering and shipbuilding in the West o f Scotland', Heinemann. Ch 2 Ironfounding and Ch 3 Engineering, and illustrations throughout.


Moss, R.M. and Currie, R.J. (1989), 'Static load testing of building strzictures', BRE Information Paper IP9189, June. Moss, R.M. (1991), 'Load testing ofJ1700r-s and roofs', The Structural Engineer, v69, n19, 1 October, p342344. Mott, R. A. (1978), 'Dry and wet puddling', Transactions of the Newcomen Society, v49, p153158. Moy, S.S.J. (ed.) (2001), 'FRP composites: life extension and strengthening of metallic structures', Institution of Civil Engineers Design & Practice Guide, Thomas Telford. Napier, Robert & Sons (1859), 'Description of experiments on the comparative strength, &C., of steel and wrought iron', Transactions of the Institution of Engineers in Scotland, v2, 1858-9, p134-163 + plates, experiments on wrought iron and steel by David Kirkaldy. Nash, E. (1867), 'Remarks upon failures in construction', Trans. RIBA, p13 1- , discussion Nasmyth, J (1842), 'Experiments on the tenacity of wrought iron', The Civil Engineer & Architect's Journal, ~ 5 , 1 8 4 2 p285 , - 287. Nasmyth, J. (ed Smiles, S.) (1897), 'James Nasmyth, Engineer: an autobiography ', John Murray, London. Chapters XI11 and XV are principally concerned with the steam hammer and its applications.

and testing work for Jesse Hartley's 1842-8 Albert Dock Buildings. See Tallis, 1986. Parliament (1994), 'The Construction (Design and Management) Regzilations 1994' (and Approved Code of Practice). HMSO. Parliamentary Select Committee on Artisans and Machinery (1824), 'Six reports on artizans and machinery: 23 February-21 May 1824', repr. Frank Cass & Co. Ltd., 1968. p340-350, for the evidence of mill machinery and ironwork specialist T.C. Hewes of Manchester. Parmenter, M. (1996), 'An investigation of the strength of cast iron beams', PhD Thesis, UMIST. Paxton, R. A. (1975), 'The influence of Thomas Telford (1757-1834) on the use of improved constructional materials in civil engineering practice ', MSc Thesis, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh. A copy is held in the Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Paxton, R. A. (1980), 'Cast iron and bridge building in Scotland; a jiirther note', Industrial Archaeology Review, vIV, nl, Winter, p108 - 110. Paxton, R. A. and Ruddock, E.C. (1981), ' A heritage of bridges between Edinburgh, Kelso and Berwick', Edinburgh. Paxton, R. A. (1983), 'Evolution of bridge building in Scotland to 1900', Civil Engineering Technology, August. Paxton, R. A. (1990), '100 years of the Forth Bridge', Thomas Telford, London.

Newlands, James (1857), 'The carpenter and joiner's assistant', Blackie, Glasgow, repr. Studio Editions, London, 1990. For use of ironwork in timber roofs, see plate XXIV for John Baird's 1825 Wellington Street Church, Glasgow. Plate XXXIII, showing a roof at Heriot School, Edinburgh, is reproduced in Yeomans, 1992.

Paxton, R. A. (1998), 'An appraisal of Dalhousie iron viad~ict(1830-46) on the Edinburgh & Dalkeith Railway extension', Heriot-Watt University.

Owen, J. (Supervisor of Metals to the Admiralty) (1847), 'Report on the relative strength of common cast iron and toughened cast iron', Vacher & Sons, 29 Parliament Street, London. An evaluation of the toughened cast iron of John Davie Morries-Stirling, Black Grange, North Berwick, patent granted October 12th 1848 - see also Civil Engineer & Architects Journal, v12, 1849, p15 1).

Pendred, H.W. (1883), 'Designs, specifications and inspection of ironwork', The Engineer, 5th October, p257-8, letters p301, 322-3, 339 (Paper to the Society of Engineers). Practical insights on riveted wrought iron girder fabrication practice, with illustrations.

Oyenhausen, C. von, and Dechen, H. von. (1829), 'Railways in England, 1826 and I827', Translation from German, Forward, E.A. (1971), published for the Newcomen Society, W. Heffer & Sons, Cambridge. Parkinson, G. & Curtin, W.G. (1986), 'Albert Dock, Liverpool - strzictural survey, appraisal and rehabilitation', The Structural Engineer, v64A, n10, October, p283-298 Describes survey, investigation

Payne, A. (1876), 'Concrete as a building material', Paper to the RIBA 10th April, discussions 15th May, 29th May.

Phillips, J. (1855), 'Description of the iron rooj in one span, over the Joint Railway Station, New Street, Birmingham', Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, vol. XIV, p251-272. Picton, J.A. (1880), 'Iron as a material for architectural constniction', Trans. RIBA, p149-161 and Kennedy, A.B.W. (1880), 'Mild Steel' and its applications to building purposes', Trans. RIBA, p162-172, Discussion of the two papers p173-192.


Pole, W. (editor), (1877), 'The life of Sir William Fairbairn, Bart., partly written by himself', Longmans, Green & Co. Reprinted, with an introduction by Musson, A.E., by David & Charles, 1970. Pole, W. (1888), 'The life of Sir William Siemens', John Murray, London. Reprinted by Siemens Ltd, 1986.

Institution of Civil Engineers, p122-129, incl. discussion. Rees, A. (early 1800s) 'Tlze Cyclopaedia; or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature', extracts published in 5 volumes, Cossons, N. (ed) (1972) as 'Rees's Manufacturing Industry', David & Charles. 'for Wire', see v5, p415-423.

Popplewell, W.C. (1901), 'Experimental engineering, Rees, G.I. (1999), 'Welding of cast irons - a guide to v2: a treatise on the methods and machines used in best practice', The Welding Institute available online through JOINIT, the TWI Internet database. the mechanical testing of materials of constr~iction', The Scientific Publishing Co., Manchester. p278-281 Rhodes, R. (1987), 'Floors in existing mill buildings', 'shop tests for iron and steel'. The Structural Engineer, v65A, n l , January, Porter, J.H. (1847), 'Examples of corr~igatediron roofs 'Verulam' letter, p34 and subsequent correspondence and buildings', Vacher & Sons, London. on the subject in 'Verulam' (from Pountney, C.P., Clancy, B.P, Brearley, L.) The Structural Engineer, Porter, A, Wood, C. et al. (1998), 'The behaviour of v65A, n4, April, p151-2, and v65A, n7, July, p272-3. struct~iralcast iron in fire: a review of previous studies and new guidance on achieving a balance Riden, P. (1993), ' A gazetteer of charcoal-fired blast between improvenzents in fire protection and the fiirnaces in Great Britain', 2nd edition, Merton Priory conservation of historic structures', English Heritage Press. Research Transactions, vl, April, pll-20. Riden, P. and Owen, J.G. (1995), 'British Blast Potter, T. (1908), 'Concrete: its uses in building', 3rd Furnace Statistics, 1790-1980',Merton Priory Press. edition, B.T. Batsford, London. Riley, L. (1885), 'The rise and progress of the Scotch Price, S. and Rogers, H (2005), 'Stone cantilevered steel trade', Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute, staircases' (James S. Shetland Hslay Lecture), The v27, p394-409, plates V1 - VIII. Structural Engineer, v83, n2, 18th January, p29-36. Rivington (1876), 'Notes on Building Construction, Pt. Pugsley, A. (1976), 'Tlze Works of Isambard Kingdom II', London, p325-333, 'Stone stairs', 354-366 Br~inel',ICE1 University of Bristol. Ch 111, p51-58, 'Riveting'. Clifton Suspension Bridge. Robbins, J. (1991), 'Premium Bond', The New Civil Raistrick, A. (l953), 'Dynasty of Iron Founders: the Engineer, 17th October, p18-19. Bures Bridge, Darbys and Coalbrookdale', Longmans, Green & Suffolk; cast iron arches strengthened with epoxy Co. bonded steel plates. Rankine, W.J.M. (1857), 'On the science of the engineer', Civil Engineer & Architects Journal, v20, March 1857, p69-7 1. Introductory lecture to the class of Civil ~ngi-neering& ~ e c h a n i c sin the University of Glasgow. Rankine, W.J.M. (1863), 'contribution to disc~issionof paper by David Kirkaldy', Transactions of the Institution of Engineers in Scotland, v6, p37 onwards. ' A Manrralof and Millwork', 1st edition, Charles Griffin & Co., London.

Rankine, W.J.M. (1872), 'Civil Engineering', revised 8th edition, Charles Griffin & ~ o , - ~ o n d o n I Reade, F.T. (1890), 'The application of iron and steel to building purposes', Trans. RIBA, v6 (new series), p13-36, + 2 plates of structural iron and steelwork details. Rendel, J.M. (1841), 'Memoir of the Montrose Suspension Bridge', Minutes of Proceedings of the

Roberts-Austen, W.C. (1894), 'An introduction to the study of rnetall~irgy',Charles Griffin & Co., London, 3rd edition. Robertson, E.G. and J. (1977), 'Cast iron decoration: a World survey ', Whitney Library of Design, WatsonGuptil Publications, New York. Rowan, F.J. (1885), 'On the iron trade in Scotland', Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute, v27, p376394,. vlts. IV & V. Royal Commission (1845), 'Report on the fall of the cotton mill at Oldham and part of the prison at Northleach', Presented to both Houses of Parliament, HMSO, London. Royal Commission (1849), 'Report of the Commission Appointed to Inquire into the Application of Iron to Railway Str~ictures',HMSO. Ruddock, Ted. (1979) 'Arch Bridges and their builders: 1735-1835', Cambridge University Press. for iron arch bridges, see particularly chapters 11, 12 and 13.



S c o r r ~ IRON s ~ STRUCTURES

Sutherland, R.J.M. (1979), 'Tl~omasTredgold (17881829): 'Some aspects of his work. Part 3 - Cast iron ', Transactions of the Newcomen Society, v5 1, p71-82. Tredgold's methods for the design of elements of cast iron and the weakness in his understanding of its tensile strength. Fig 5 in the paper shows Tredgold's design for a shallow truss, similar to the one preserved at Ironbridge (Illustration 276).

Swailes, T. (2003), '19th century fireproof buildings; their strength and robustness'. The Structural Engineer, v8 1, n 19, 7th October, p27-34. Swailes, T. and Aja Fernandez de Retana, E. (2004), The strength of cast iron columns and the research work of Eaton Hodgkinson (1789-1861). The Structural Engineer, v82, n2, 20th January, p18-23. Tallis, J.A, Taylor, R.D. & Dishman, T.J. (1986), 'Restoration of Albert Dock', The Structural Engineer, v64A, n10, October, p291-298. See Parkinson & C~lrtin,1986.

Sutherland, R.J.M. (1988), 'Report of the Institution of Structural Engineers Informal Study Group (History of Structural Engineering): surnrner meeting in Glasgow', The Structural Engineer, v67, n9, 2nd May, p179-181.

Tarn, E.W. (1886), revision and enlargement of Tredgold, T. 'Elementary principles of carpentry.. ..with an appendix of specimens of various roofs of iron and stone', Crosby, Lockwood & Co., London. section IX, p207-223, for general details of iron fixings to timber structures Plate 50, 'Iron roof: made for the Clyde Trustees for the quay at Glasgow' (delineated R. Turner).

Sutherland, R.J.M. (1989), 'S1zipbuilding and the long span roof ', Transactions of the Newcomen Society, v60, p107-126. (2 iron roofs were built for Tod & McGregor, Glasgow shipbuilders, in 1853). Sutherland, R.J.M. (1994), 'Active engineering history', The Structural Engineer, v72, n13, 5 July, p205-216. Argues the relevance of history of engineering to present day practice, with numerous insights into the real structural behaviour of buildings. Sutherland, R.J.M (ed), (1997), 'Structural Iron, 17501850'. Ashgate Publishing Ltd. Swailes, T. (1995), 'An experitnental investigation of wall-jloorjiratne interaction irz nineteenth century textile mills', Proc. 4th International Masonry Conference, v2, British Masonry Society, p370-374. Swailes, T. (1996), 'l9rh century cast iron beams: their design, manllfacture and reliability', Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, February, v114, issue 1, p25-35. Swailes, T. and Marsh, J.O. (-), arch bridges',

'Victorian iron

Swailes, T. (1997), 'Tlze assessment of nineteenth century fireproof floors for twentieth century loadings', Proc. 7th International Conference on Structural Faults and Repair, Edinburgh, v3, p223232. Swailes, T. (1997), 'On site tests to investigate the robustness of a nineteenth century textile mill', in 'Structural assessment: the role of large and fullscale testing', (ed Virdi, K. et al.), E. & F.N. Spon, p5 17-524. Swailes, T. and Marsh, J.O. (1998), 'Structural appraisal of iron-framed textile mills', Institution of Civil Engineers Design and Practice Guide, Thomas Telford Ltd.

Thorneycroft, G.B. (IS-), 'On the man~lfactureof malleable iron: with the res~lltsof experiments on the strength of railway axles', Min. Proc. ICE, v9 p294302, incl. discussion Tilly, G. (2002), 'Conservation of Bridges', Spon Press. Topp, C. (2001), 'dissertation on wrought iron/ puddled iron', The Real Wrought Iron Co. Ltd. Website. TRL (2001), 'Iron Bridge railings safety checks', Research Focus, issue 47, November. A brief report of computer modelling and laboratory testing by TRL Ltd of the Cast iron railings to the Iron Bridge, Coalbrookdale, strengthened by the replacement of mechanical fasteners and by the use of carbon fibre reinforcement. Tredgold, T. (1824),' 'Practical essay on the strength of cast iron and other metals', 2nd ed'n J. Taylor, London. Turnbull, W. (1843), 'Practical essay on the Strength of Cast Iron Beams, Girders, and Columns; in which the principles of calc~tlationare exhibited in a plain and popular manner', Professional Papers of the Corps of Royal Engineers, vol. VI, p77-147, + 2 plates. Turner, R. (1850), 'Description of the iron roof over the railway station, Lime Street, Liverpool', Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, vIX, p204-214 + plate. TWI (2001), 'Welding wrought iron', JOINIT (The Welding Institute database on the Internet, available to members).

187


Unwin, W.C. (1869), 'Wrought iron bridges and roofs', E. & F.N. Spon, London. Unwin, W.C. (1910), 'The testing of materials of construction', Longmans, Green & Co., London, 3rd edition. See p316 for local hardening of steel by shearing or punching. See p332 for analysis of Loch Maree wrought iron bloom by M.D. Dougal. Wallis, G.J.O. (of Dorothea Restorations Ltd) (1999), 'Engineering conservation - cast and wrought iron', in Proceedings of the International Congress on Urban Heritage and Building Maintenance (Iron and Steel), Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, Oct. 27t11,p67-77. Warren, K. (1970), 'The British iron and steel sheet industrv since 1840', G. Bell & Sons Ltd, London. Watkinson, F. and Boniszewski, T. (1965), 'The selection of weld metal for wrought iron', British Welding Research Association Bulletin, v6, n9, p236-240. Watson, M. (1990), 'Jute and Flax Mills in Dundee', Hutton Press Ltd. Watson, M. (1992), 'Matthew Murray and Broadford Works, Aberdeen: evidence for the Earliest IronFramed Flax Mills', Textile History, v23, n2, p225242. Webster, J.J. (1891), 'Fire-proof construction', Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, v105, 1891, p249-286. p267, Measures Bros. floor. Wermiel* 'The of fireproof construction in Great Britain and the United States in the nineteenth century', Construction History, vol. 9, p3-26.

Wermiel, S. (1995), 'Rethinking cast iron columns', Building Renovation, Winter 1995, p37-40. Describes the use and eventual demise of cast iron colilmns in buildings in the United States. Wermiel, S. (2000), 'The fireproof building: technology and piiblic safety in the nineteenthcentury American city', Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA. Williams, F.S. (1852), 'Our iron roads: their history, construction and social influences', Ingram, Cooke & Co., London. p198-210 for permanent way construction and maintenance, including rails. Williams, M. (1847), 'Description of wrought iron roofs erected over two building slips in the Royal Dockyards at Pembroke, South Wales', Papers on subjects connected with the duties of the Corps of Royal Engineers, vol. IX, 1847, p50 - 58, + plates. Wood, J.L. (1998), 'Shipbuilding', (in the Scotland's Past in Action series), National Museums of Scotland Publishing. Yeomans, D.T. (1992), 'The trussed roof: its history and development', Scolar Press. Young, C.D. (c.1847), "A short treatise on the system of wire fencing, in its various forms, as applicable to railway purposes.. .", C.D. Young & Co., Edinburgh. Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers Young, C.D. (c.1863), 'Illustrations of iron structures for home and abroad. Consisting of stores, dwellinghouses, markets, arcades, railway stations and roofings, &C., &C., constriicted of wrought and cast iron and Manufactllred by Charles D. Young & Company, Engineers, Ironfounders, Contractors, &c. ' Catalogue not dated (Library of the Institution of Civil Engineers).


GLOSSARY

Acid Steel (see also Basic Steel)

Basic Steel

A relatively cheap, hard Steel (as opposed to Mild Steel), made in the latter part of the nineteenth century from Iron in an Open-hearth Furnace. The furnace lining being an acid, or chemically neutral material, did not remove phosphorous from the Iron.

Steel made using a process perfected by Sidney Gilchrist Thornas in 1879 that enabled Phosphoric iron to be used in a Bessemer Converter, or Openhearth Furnace. Phosphorous was taken out of the Iron and removed in the Slag through chemical reaction with a basic or alkali furnace lining (e.g. dolomite, a form of Limestone).

Air Furnace A Reverberatory Furnace that was used in the Foundry for remelting iron.

Beam

metal, but consisting of two or more metals combined, or metals and non-metallic elements in intimate mixture or solution. See Steel, for example.

A term for a horizontal spanning or bridging element, less commonly used in the nineteenth century than now. To some extent the word Beam is interchangeable with Joist (smaller sized beams, for example in buildings) and Girder (larger sized beams, for example in bridges).

Angle Iron

Belgian Iron

Wrought Iron rolled in the form of an L shape. The term Angle Iron is still sometimes used when referring to Steel sections of the same shape.

Relatively cheap rolled Wrought Iron sections imported in the second half of the nineteenth century, initially in larger sizes than available in Britain. Popularly believed to be of inferior quality to domestic products.

Alloy A substance with the general physical properties of a

Annealing Softening of Iron or Steel by heating, then slow cooling.

Arch (see also Jack Arch) A structure in the form of a bow, working principally

Bending (or Flexure) The action by which a beam is curved, placing its concave face in compression and its convex face in tension.

in compression. In traditional masonry construction the arch ring is made of separate pieces or voussoirs, each supporting its neighbour, between abutments providing vertical support and resisting lateral arch thrust.

A vessel in which air was blown through molten Pig Iron or Cast Iron to make Steel by removing most of the Carbon.

Astragal (see Glazing Bar)

Best Iron, Best Best (BB) Iron

Aqueduct A bridging structure carrying an open artificial water course.

Bar Iron (see also wrought iron) A term used to indicate wrought iron bar of round, square or rectangular section, as opposed to cast iron. Variants of the term were used to indicate material at an intermediate stage in manufacture (e.g. Muck Bar) or of different grades (e.g. Merchant Bar).

Bessemer Converter

Different qualities of Wrought Iron (see also Lowmoor, Swedish, Treble Best, Yorkshire).

Blackband Ore An iron ore containing coal used as fuel in a hot-blast furnace.

Blacking Blackening (see Moulding) A Coke dust or Plumbago-based coating applied to a mould to prevent fusion of the molten Iron with the sand.


Blast-furnace

Brittleness

A furnace in which iron is extracted from iron ore. The chamber at the centre of the furnace is a cylinder narrowing towards its top, above a funnel-shaped base. Into the open top are fed charcoal or coke as fuel, iron ore, and limestone as a flux. Operation is continuous, an intense heat being maintained by a blast of air at the base, where the furnace is periodically tapped to draw off molten iron.

The property of easily breaking, without significant distortion. See Ductility, and Malleable, the 'opposite' of brittleness.

Built-up Bearnl Column Plates and Rolled Iron sections riveted (later bolted or welded) together to form a compound section.

Bulb flat Bloom The product of the Bloomery. The term was later used to describe the solid mass produced by Shingling the balls of Wrought Iron taken from the Puddling Furnace.

Bloomery An early form of furnace used for obtaining Wrought Iron from Iron Ore.

Boiler-plate girder A girder with a web of one or more wrought iron plates, of the kind from which steam engine boilers were made, to which angle iron flanges are riveted. Large section riveted girders from the late nineteenth century may be steel, or combine steel and wrought iron elements.

A relatively easily made rolled wrought iron flat with one edge swelled out in the form of a bulb. Together with a riveted flange angle, such sections were useful as deck beams, before rolled I-section joists became widely available.

Cable-stayed Bridge A Bridge with the deck is supported between piers by a series of straight tension cables anchored (or stayed) at height to the piers or masts. Stiffer than a suspension bridge, but with the deck subject to compression to counter the cable tensions.

Camber An upward curvature built in to a horizontal spanning member to offset deflection under self-weight.

Carbon Brazing The joining of two metal parts by heat and using a flux, without the introduction of a more fusible alloy as a solder, and without mechanical working or forging. Sometimes the term brazing is used to describe joints in which hard solder is used. Small parts not loaded structurally might in the past be brazed or 'burned on' to a casting.

Bressummer, or Breastsummer A large timber beam or lintel with a broad supporting surface, carrying masonry above a shop front or over a bay window, for example.

A non-metallic element occuring in several forms and a constituent of all organic compounds. Graphite is crystalline and opaque carbon (also called Plumbago), while Charcoal and Coke are amorphous and opaque forms of carbon made by burning off the volatile constituents from wood and coal respectively.

Cast Iron An alloy of Iron and Carbon poured molten into moulds. Grey Cast Iron (of the Flake Graphite form) was used for structural and purposes. (See also Ductile Iron, Malleable Cast Iron, Toughened Cast Iron, White Cast Iron).

Bridge

Cementite

A spanning structure, with a deck or platform, typically enabling passage over water, road or railway. Iron bridges are sometimes hybrids of two or more different forms (For example, Arch, Cablestayed, Girder, Suspension, Truss and Tubular).

A hard material formed by the chemical combination at high temperature of Iron and Carbon. Also called iron carbide.

British Standard Beam A beam section with tapered flanges of a standard size as specified in the list of British Standard Rolled Sections issued by the Engineering Standards Committee in 1903, and in subsequent revised lists. Makers such as Dorman, Long & Co. were rolling several such sections some years before publication of the first British Standard, so BSB sections may not be dateable with certainty.

Chafery A furnace for raising Wrought Iron from the Finery to forging temperature.

Chaplet A wrought iron rest for a Core using in Moulding, usually comprising a saddle and fixing spike.


Charcoal A substance with a high carbon content obtained by driving off the volatile constituents of wood by slow heating in a kiln, in the absence of air. Superseded by coke as the fuel for the blast-fiir~zaceby the beginning of the nineteenth century. Charcoal Iron A term generally used (like S~vedishIron) to denote highest quality wrought iron, made from pig iron from a charcoal fired blast furnace, such as at Bonawe. Reserved for high quality forging and delicate blacksmith's work. Chilled cast iron Grey cast iron rendered white, or hard (and brittle) by rapid cooling. Bearing surfaces for moving parts were sometimes 'chilled'. Cinder Pig Pig Iron made by mixing Slag (or cinder) in with Iron Ore in the Blast F~inzace.The Hot-blast made possible the use of waste products in this way, sometimes leading to an inferior end product. Coke A substance with a high carbon content obtained by driving off the volatile constituents of coal by heating in covered heaps or kilns, in the absence of air. Stronger than charcoal, coke as the fuel made a much taller blast-fi~rnacepossible. Cold-Blast Pig Iron (see also Hot-Blast Pig Iron) in which the air blast was Iron from a Blast F~lr~zace not heated.

Corrugated iron Rolled wrought iron sheet with ridges and furrows providing stiffness in the direction of span, used for cladding and roof coverings particularly the 1840s, when it might also be galvanised, and as permanent formwork for concrete in fireproof building floors and bridge decks. The term is still applied today to corrugated steel sheet. Crystalline The solid form (being made up of crystals), taken by most chemical compounds formed by slow cooling from a molten state. Larger or coarser crystals are associated with slower cooling. Cupola A coke-fired foundry furnace for re-melting cast iron. Deck Beam A rolled wrought iron or steel beam, of which there were a variety of forms, used in shipbuilding. Wrought iron deck beams were used as roof truss ribs, prior rolled I-sections becoming common. Direct casting Casting direct from the blast furnace rather than from re-melted pig iron. Ductile Iron A ductile, less brittle form of Grey Cast Iron, not developed until 1946, with free graphite present in the form of spheres rather than flakes (also called Spheroidal Graphite Cast Iron, SG Iron or Nodular Iron).

Cold-short Iron (cf. Hot-short) Wrought iron which crumbles when struck with a hammer when cold.

Eccentric load A load not passing through the centroidal axis of a structural section, causing bending in a column, torsion in a beam.

Column A vertical support within a building (alternatively pillar, or stanchion in heavy construction) or to a bridge (alternatively pier), that may form part of a skeletal frame together with beams or girders or trcisses.

Elasticity The property of recovery of original form after removal of an applied compressive or tensile force. By Hooke's Law, Stress is proportional to Strain. Young's Modulus of Elasticity is the ratio 'Stress1 Strain'.

Compression An action tending to make a body shorter (the 'opposite' of Tension), or causing it to occupy a smaller space.

Eye-bar A wrought iron or steel tie bar with an eye at one or both ends for a pinned connection. Eyes were made by forging from the bar but were also made separately and welded on, leading to a local point of weakness. Howard & Ravenhill patent bars were rolled in one piece. Eye-bars in important structures were prooftested.

Core An internal mould of baked clayey sand used to form a cavity within a casting. For columns the core would have a bar as internal support with hemp rope to support the sand.


Fatigue Failure of metals by fracture due to the effect of fluctuating stresses acting at a level below the static stress that might cause a ductile failure in wrought iron or steel, or a brittle failure in cast iron. Fatigue is of particular importance in bridge structures.

Gauge A term relating to the diameter of wire, the thickness of metal sheet, or the pitch and profile of screw threads. Gilchrist-Thomas Steel (see Basic Steel)

Ferro-concrete The late nineteenth/ early twentieth century name for concrete reinforced with bars of iron and later with steel. Fettling Cleaning up of castings removed from the mould by breaking off projecting 'gates' and 'fins' with a chisel or hammer, then tidying up with wire brush, grinding wheel etc. Small Blow-holes were routinely plugged with putty, cement or lead. Filler joist floor A floor formed of quite closely spaced cast iron, wrought iron or steel joists, filled between with plain concrete. Finery (see also Chafery) A Charcoal-fired hearth used before the invention of Puddling for converting Cast Iron to Wrought Iron.

Girder A large beam. The term is used to describe primary horizontally spanning supports in bridges. Glazing Bar (or Astragal) A small section Rafter member, or internal framing member in a window, providing direct support to glazing, in a conservatory for example. Grey (or Gray) Iron (see also Cast Iron) Cast Iron with a relatively high free Carbon content, which when fractured cold, shows a granular, greyish surface. Haematite Red iron ore, or femc oxide, Fe203. A rich ore, containing about 70% of iron. Hardness Resistance to indentation, scratching or wear.

Fireproof A term used from the late eighteenth century to describe buildings or building elements made of incombustible materials. The modern equivalent term is fire-resistant.

Hog-backed Beam (see also Fish-bellied beam) A flat-bottomed beam, increasing in depth, or height, towards the centre of its span. Also called Skewback.

Fish-bellied Beam (see also Hog-backed beam) A flat-topped beam, increasing in depth towards the centre of its span.

Hoop Iron (see also Rod Iron) Wrought Iron in narrow flexible strips for casks, wagon wheel tyres, etc. A product of the Slitting Mill, later produced by grooved rolls.

Flake Graphite Cast Iron Grey Cast Iron in which the free Graphite is present in the form of flakes, or platelets, that act as internal stress raisers and lead to weakness of the material in tension.

Hot-blast Pig iron Iron from a blast-furnace in which the air blast is prior to its entry to the furnace. The hot-blast was the invention of James Beaumont Neilson.

Flange (cf. Web) In an iron beam or joist, the horizontal plate(s) at the end(s) of the vertical Web plate.

Iron Ores Compounds of iron with non-metals, chiefly oxygen, occumng naturally in the earth.

Flexure (see Bending)

Jack (Arch, Rafter) Jack was a common name in Victorian times for a helping boy, and by extension for anything that gave convenient but apparently slight service. A Jack Arch is a secondary element spanning a modest distance between primary beams or girders to form a building floor or bridge deck. The terms Jack Rafter, Common Rafter and Secondary Rafter all describe the same roof element.

Flitch beam A beam in which a plate of cast iron or wrought iron is sandwiched between timbers and held in place by bolts. Fracture Rupture or breakage of a solid body by which strength may be impaired. Fractures may be described as brittle, ductile, or fibrous, for example.


Joist In the nineteenth century, a small beam. A modem usage is the distinction between a rolled steel joist with tapered flanges and a rolled lrniversal beam with near-parallel flanges. Lowmoor Iron (see York station) A brand of Yorkshire iron, synonymous with superior quality, either cast or wrought. Malleable (see also Forge) The ability to be formed by hammer blows. Malleability is temperature dependent, pure iron being most malleable at a low white heat. Malleable Cast Iron Cast iron rendered less brittle by very slow Annealing. Placed in contact with powdered Haematite when so treated, the Carbon content of small castings was reduced.

Neutral Axis That part of a curved beam, between its concave and convex face, which is not changed in length by bending. Nodular Iron Also known as spheroidal graphite cast iron or ductile cast iron, invented in the first half of the twentieth century. Sometimes used as a replacement for grey cast iron when greater impact resistance is required. Pattern (see Moulding) Pearlite Formed on slow cooling of cast iron from the molten state, comprising thin layers of Cementite with thicker layers of Iron between. Phosphoric Iron Pig Iron or Cast Iron with a relatively high Phosphorous content (e.g. Scotch Iron).

Microstructure The structure of a material as seen under a microscope, or in a photomicrograph. For metals, the surface is polished and acid-etched prior to viewing.

Pig Iron, or Pig (see also Cast Iron) The product of the blast furnace.

Mild steel Steel comprising iron with a relatively low carbon content, not affected by heat treatment.

Pile The arrangement of cut up pieces of Wrought Iron for heating, Shingling, then rolling.

Mine A name for Iron Ore. Mine Iron is made from Ore only, unlike Cinder Pig.

Pillar (see Column)

Moulding (see also Pattern) The formation of an impression in a mould in the shape of the casting required. Green-sand molllding used the ordinary damp sand of the foundry in iron boxes orflasks (the top box being the Cope and bottom the Drag). Large castings moulded in the foundry floor sand required a top box only. Hollow parts in a casting are formed using Cores. Runners and gates are openings that let the molten iron into the mould and vents are openings to let the mould gases out, formed by pricking the sand with a vent wire or spike. In Dry-sand nzocrldir~g,used for cores and for some ornamental ironwork, the moulds are dried before use. Painting or coating with a patent or coke dust-based blackening prevented fusing of the sand and molten iron. In Loam moulding, the mould was built up without patterns by coating brickwork with h o r n (typically a clayey sand, with horse dung and cow hair binder and reinforcement), which was then swept or trowelled into the desired shape.

Principal A term used to indicate any primary horizontal spanning or bridging member, as opposed to a less important secondary or tertiary member (For example, Principal rafter as opposed to Secondary rafter, Jack rafter, or Common rafter). Proof Load A load above the working load, but below the ultimate load. Proof load testing ensures a factor of safety against failure. Puddled Bar Also called Muck Bar, the product of the first rolling in the manufacture of wrought iron. Puddling (see also Reverberatory Furnace) The process of obtaining wrought iron by burning the carbon and impurities out of cast iron in a Reverberatoryjilrnace. In Dry Puddling, introduced by Henry Cort, white cast iron (with low carbon content).


Purlin A beam member in a roof, spanning beween cross walls, beams or trusses, and supporting secondary rafters.

Scotch Iron/ Scotch Pig Generally relatively cheap hot-blast pig iron (from the 1830s), favoured in mixtures for castings because of its free flowing qualities and very suitable for fine decorative castings.

Rafter A pitched roof support following the slope of the roof, either as the Principal rafter in a truss, or as Jack, Common or Secondary rafters supporting the roof covering.

Shingling The process of hammering or squeezing the ball from the P~iddlingFurnace to remove slag and impurities and to solidify the metal into a Bloom.

Reverberatory Furnace (see also Puddling) A furnace with separate chambers for the fuel and for the material being heated, the roof of the furnace being shaped to draw air across and reflect heat from one chamber to the other.

Shrink-ring A wrought iron ring heated and fitted over lugs attached to two or more elements, usually cast iron. On cooling, the ring shrinks and exerts a clamping action on the connected parts.

Roasting Slow burning in large heaps, or in a kiln, of broken pieces of Iron Ore mixed with coal to drive off water and sulphur. Also called Calcining.

Siemens-MartinSteel

Robustness The ability of a structure to withstand abnormally severe loads or disturbance without suffering partial collapse or extensive damage. Rod Iron (see also Hoop Iron) Square section Wrought Iron, for conversion to nails and spikes. A product of the Slitting Mill, later produced by grooved rolls. Rolled Iron Wrought iron formed and shaped by passing heated through rollers. Rivet A dowel type fastener of wrought iron or steel, with a shank and head, used for joining two or more preholed plate elements. The rivet is heated prior to fitting through the hole and the shank end hammered to close the joint. On cooling and shrinkage of the rivet, the joined pieces are clamped together. Rust Cement A jointing or caulking material, based upon iron borings or turnings, for which there were many recipes (for example, from Cassell's c. 1907 Engineer's Handbook, 1 lb flour of sulphur, 1 Ib salammoniac, 1 cwt. cast iron borings, with sufficient water to mix to a dry paste). Scarf An end to end joint between structural members in which the ends are cut on a slope to overlap without an increase in width or depth.

Skewback (see Hog-backed) Slag Waste material produced during Smelting, or during the making of Wrought Iron or Steel. Sometimes called Cinder. Slitting Mill A water-powered mill for dividing heated Wrought Iron strip into Hoop Iron and Rod Iron by means of rotating cutters on rollers. Smelting The process of extracting iron from its ore in a Blast Fcirnace. Soffit The underside of a structural member or architectural feature. Spheroidal Graphite (SG) Iron (see Ductile Iron) Stability Resistance of a structure to collapse or buckling as a result of a disturbing force; resistance of an element or part of an element to buckling under compression. Steam Engine A machine for converting heat into work by utilising the expansion of water on its conversion to steam. Stationary Engines provided an alternative to the water wheel for powering factories, blast furnace bellows and ironworks machinery, and Locomotive Engines revolutionised nineteenth century transport. Steel Steel is an Alloy, a solid solution of Carbon in pure Iron.


Strain (see also Stress) In modem engineering terms, Strairz is the ratio 'change in length/ original length'. Strength The ability of a material or structure to resist forces or deformations tending to break it. Stress (see also Strain) In modern engineering terms, Stress is the ratio 'applied force1 original cross-sectional area'. Confusingly, until about 1860, the term Strain was generally used instead of stress. Strut (see Col~mm) A member in compression, with load applied (nominally) along the centroidal axis of the member. Suspension Bridge A Bridge formed by suspending between piers Wrought Iron chains or wire ropes (later Steel) and from these a deck. A light and relatively cheap structure, but lacking inherent stiffness. Suspension Girder (see Beanflr~rssedGirder) Smaging (see also Upsetting) The drawing down at the forge, or reducing in size or diameter, of a heated piece of ivrolrgkt Iron. A Stvage is a blacksmith's tool for working rounded parts. Swedish Iron A term generally used in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to indicate high quality Wrought Iron imported from Sweden. Tempering Heat treatment of medium or high carbon Steel for tool making. Steel heated to cherry red and suddenly cooled or quenched in water or oil is made very hard. Reheating until the surface oxide reaches the desired colour and quenching in water 'lets down' the hardness to the required temper. Tenacity A nineteenth century term for tensile Strength. Tension An action tending to make a body longer (the 'opposite' of Compressiorz),or to stretch it. Tie A member in Tension.

Tied Arch An arch tied between its feet to eliminate horizontal thrust on supporting abutments.

Toughened Cast Iron (see also Cast Iron) A stronger form of Cast Iron first made in the late 1840s by melting with cast iron up to a quarter its weight of Wrought Iron scrap, thus reducing the overall carbon content. Probably not much used. Toughness Resistance to brittle fracture. Treble Best Iron (see also Best, Best Best (BB) Iron) Very high quality Wro~igktIron, superior to 'Best Best' for a given Brand. Truss A skeletal framework in which load is transmitted to supports by compressive and tensile forces in the elements of the framework, rather than by bending. A true truss is fully triangulated.

Trussed Bearnl Girder A compound element in which a B e a d Girder, generally of timber or Cast Iron and working in Bending, is strengthened with Wrought Iron trussing bars working in Tension. Also called a Suspension Girder. Tubular Girder A rivetted box-section Wrought Iron Girder form patented by William Fairbairn in 1846 and widely used in railway Bridge construction. Universal Beam A steel beam with near-parallel flanges, as first rolled in Britain at Lackenby in the late 1950s. Early parallel flanged sections were rolled in Europe from c.1904 and later in the United States by a rather different process and imported to Britain. Upsetting (see also Swaging) Increasing the thickness of a piece of heated Wrought Iron at the forge by jumping up, or repeatedly striking the end of an upright bar on an anvil. Web (see also Flange) In an iron beam or joist, the vertical plate with a Flange at one or both ends. Welsh Iron Relatively expensive Cold-blast Pig Iron from Wales bringing qualities of strength and hardness to a mixture for Cast Iron. \Vet Puddling (see Puddling) White Cast Iron (see Cast Iron) Cast Iron with a low Carbon content, hard and brittle and unsuitable for structural purposes. When fractured cold, shows a granular, greyish surface.


Wire (see also Gauge) Working Load 1 Working Stress The maximum load or stress to be sustained by a structural element. Wrought Iron A relatively pure form of strong, ductile iron, made by removing the carbon from cast iron in a puddling furnace and shaped by hot rolling or forging Yorkshire Iron Iron of high quality, either cast or wrought. Ordinary Yorkshire Wrought Iron was generally considered equivalent to 'Best Best' Staffordshire Iron for example.


APPENDIX A GREEN SAND MOULDING AND CASTING OF REPLACEMENT STAIR BALUSTERS, CHARLES LAING & SONS LTD, BEAVERBANK FOUNDRY, EDINBURGH

Pattern laid on a wooden board and bottom box placed ove,: Sand sieved over patterns.

Sandfinned in by hand (or 3ngered')

Coarse unsieved sand placed next

Ramming within the "Peg Rammer", a plain bar; is followed by ramming with the "Dog Rammer" (as shown)


A board is pru't-~

top, prior to turning over

Turning over

Tidying

lip

this surface and edge with a trowel

Clamps arefied, prior to turning over

The clamps and then the board are removed


Patterns removed, sarzd dusted with parting powder and loose powder h1on.n ojf with hellovc~s.III the backgrortnd, a mo~tlrl irk the top bo.r in place, rrnd others weighted down.

Placing the top box. Note the sand is level across the top box, and all the derail of the pattern is in the bottom box.

Fixing mould clanzps. Note the "pouring brrshes" or "slag traps" are now irz place.

Mould box detail. Note the vent wire, used for perforating at the sand to aid release of mould slag.

Filling the crucible fmin t/2efurnace. "Slagit" (crushed sea shells) is .sl>rinkledon top of the iron in the ladle to hell~fusetogether the impurities which rise to the top.

Filling the mould,from the crucible.


Casting complete.

Removing the balusters from the sand, ready for "fettling"

Any defective castings are recycled. Other raw marerials inlcude bus engine block castings and bottle moulds.

(All pictures in Appendix A: Historic Scotland)


APPENDIX B UNITS AND CONVERSION FACTORS

Notes 1. British Imperial units will be found in old documents, maps, site and building plans and detail drawings. - For interpretative purposes, note that iron structures were generally 'built' units of feet and inches. 2.

9.81 metres per second per second (m/s2) is the acceleration due to gravity. When indicating forces rather than masses, the units pound-force (Ib-f) or ton-force are strictly correct, although the word force is often taken for granted and not written.

3.

Rounded conversion factors are derived from those shown in bold. For a more complete listing of British Imperial weights and measures refer to the web site of the National Weights and Measures Laboratory, www.nwml.gov.uk Conversion factor calculators are available on the useful 'engineering fundamentals' subscription web site www.efunda.com



chain link see tie bar Chance & Co., Birmingham 152 charcoal 14, see Glossary Charing Cross Station, London: roof collapse 128 Chatham Dockyard, iron-framed buildings 111 Chicago, Great Fire of 1871 131 Clark, William Tiemey 65 Cleveland Bridge, Bath 150 Clifton Suspension Bridge, Bristol 65,100 coke see Glossary coke breeze concrete 131 cold-short iron 83 cold working, of wrought iron and steel 90-1 collapse, disproportionate; of buildings 24, 26-8, 74-5, 1078, 122, 125-8, 146 column, cast iron circular section 1.5, 22-33, 36,40,43,49, 52, 55-6, 71,74-5, 78-80, 103-114, 118, 124, 146 damage due to impact 104-106, 109, 117, 128, 145 engineering properties 94-6, 98, 106-9 in fire 127, 134-137 as pipes supplying steam for heating or gas for lighting 23 as rainwater downpipes 106,153 repairs, cold stitch 252 repairs, bolted 145 solid circular H, I and X sections 22,41, 106,111, 119,139, 140, 145, 165 column, steel 49 column, steel; replacement for cast iron 56 Colville & Sons, David 19, 20 concrete Allen's patent 138 Conservation Area Consent 143 Conservation Plan 10,74 conservation, principles of 8-10, 141-3 conservatory see glassho~~se core, moulding to form voids, etc. in castings 103-4 Cort, Henry 17, 101 corrosion 55.73, 106, 141-2, 147, 149, 151-4 corrosion prevention historic methods 154, see painting corrugated iron34-6, 38, 154 Cowlairs Station, Glasgow 37 Cowper, Edward Alfred 36 Cramond Ironworks (wrought iron) 15 Crawford, H 154 Cresy, Edward 99 crush box 24,26 Crystal Palace (Great Exhibition Building), Hyde Park, London 5.50.59, 154 Cultural Significance, ICOMOS definition of 10 cupola 17, see Glossary Custom House cast iron floor beams, London 46

D Darby, Abraham 14 Darlington Apartments collapse, New York 107, 109, 125 Darlington Wrought Iron Railway 17,101 Davies, Thomas 46 Dean Clough Mills, Halifax 81 deck beam see beam, bvror~ghtiron Dee Bridge, Chester - trussed iron girder failure 66

Dennett, Charles Colton 129 seefloor; patent Ditherington Flax Mill, Shrewsbury 146 Dorman, Long & Co. 132 Dow & Duncan, Dundee 32 Dredge, James; patent suspension bridge 63-5

E Edinburgh & Dalkeith 'Innocent' Railway 33, 36, 66 Euston Station roof, London 33 F Fairbairn, William 24,28,67-9,76,78,80,91,102,110,112,129 fatigue cast iron 63, 66 wrought iron 100, 103 see Glossary Fenton, Murray & Wood 24 finery 11, 14, 17 fire, damage of buildings by 72-3, fireproof see Glossary fire prevention 138-9 fire resistance cast iron beam 98, 135-6, 138 cast iron column 127, 134-137 concrete 138 stone floor slabs 138 Whichcord's patent floor 138 wrought iron 136 Firth Street Mill, Huddersfield 126-7 floor, 'jack' arch on beam brick 23-4, 128-9 concrete 129-130 hollow clay pot 23 whinstone 26 floor, filler joist 30, 101, 82, 126, 133-4 floor loads (historic) crowd 46 normal 44 sugar refinery 28 warehouse 44 floor, patent Bunnett 134 Dennett 129-130, 131, 135 Doulton-Peto 134-5 Evans & Swain 135, 140 Farrell 138 Fawcett 134-5 Ferguson 134 Fox & Barrett 102, 132-4 Frazzi 134 Gardner 133 Homan and Rodgers 134-5 Hyatt 134, 140 King 134 Kleine 134 Lindsay 134-5 Measures 133 Northcroft 134 Phillips 133 Pioneer (Chicago) 135 Potter 135 Moreland 130, 135


7

l SCOTTISH IRONSTRUCTURES

McDowell, Steven, & Co. 59 microstructure 2, see Glossary Mitchell, Joseph 67-9 mill-scale 155 Moreland's of London, Contractors 130 Morries-Stirling 94 moulding 4, Mushet, David 19 Mushet, George 50 Mylne, Robert 59 Mythe Bridge, Gloucestershire: steel glued to cast iron 144

N Napier & Sons, Robert; Glasgow 92 Nash, John 112 Nasmyth, Jarnes 88-91 Neilson, James Beaurnont 3,19 Newlands Co., Cumberland 14 Nicholson, Peter 49 Nixon, Williarn 45, 112

P paint lead-based, safety legislation for 156 original paint finishes 154 intumescent, for fire resistance 135-6 maintenance of existing 154-5 specifications 155-7 Palm House, Kew Gardens, London 8,102, 152 Palrner, Henry Robertson 35 pattress plates, cast iron 28 Peddie & Kinnear 134, 136 Pembroke Royal Naval Dockyard: iron sheds 35-6, 154 Percy, Dr 83 piling (as in wrought iron making) 86-7, 90, 101 Playfair, William 4 Point Pleasant (Silver) Bridge, Ohio (collapse) 100 Pont Cyssylte Aqueduct 64 Potter, Thomas 133 puddling, of wrought iron 17, 86

R Radcliffe's Mill, Oldham (collapse) 27 railings, cast iron 5, 56, 141, 143, 149, 150 rails cast iron 17 wrought iron 17, 101-2 steel 19 railway axles, wrought iron; fractures of 85 Rankine, Prof. W J M 46, 85.92, 106 Rastrick, John Urpeth 46, 112 red-short 83 Redpath, Brown & Co. 49, 61-2 reinforcement for concrete, hoop iron as 132 Regulations Building Construction, Design & Management in Glasgow, for structural iron 5 lead-based paints 156 repair bolted splice 145-6, 149 cold stitching of cast iron 143-5 definition of, by ICOMOS 10 filling and jointing materials 148-9 surface-bonded reinforcement 144, 146

welding of cast iron 147-8 welding of wrought iron 91,147 replacement of missing elements 149-152 Reynolds, William 98 Robertson & Lister, Glasgow 6 Robertson & Orchar 26.32 Roebuck, Dr John 14 rolling marks 8, 36 rolling mill 14-5, 17, 19 Ronan Point, London: disproportionate collapse 122 roofs 25,30-40,47-49, 117, 128, 174 Royal Albert Hall, London 49,103,133 Royal Commission Appointed to Inquire into the Application of Iron to Railway Structures 66

S Saracen Foundry, Glasgow (W MacFarlane & Co.) 1,4, 59 Scheduled Ancient Monument Consent 143 ships iron 1 steel 70 Shotts Iron Co. 66 shrink-ring see Glossary Sirnpson, Archibald 61 slitting mill 14-5 Smeaton, John 14, 33 Smirke, Robert45-6, 112 Spanish Town Bridge, Jamaica 61 St. Pancras Railway Station, London 154 steam engine Boulton & Watt 3, 15 Fenton, Murray & Wood 24 Newcomen 15, 102 steel Bessemer 19 open-hearth 19, puddled 90,92 Steel Company of Scotland Ltd 19-20 Stephenson, George 112 Stephenson, Robert 33,65 Stevenson, Robert 33 Stobie, James 21 Stratfield Saye iron carriage bridge 61, 147 structural appraisal 7 1-82 structural survey use of the term 71-2 safe execution of 72-4 Stmtt, William 22, 30 Stuttle, William 3 Sun Foundry, Kirkintilloch 4

T Telford, Thornas 3, 30,60-1.64, 98-9, 100, 144 testing load 80-2, 114-5, 117, 130-4 non-destructive 42, 63, 82, 101, 104, 136 Thornson, Alexander 7 Tickford Bridge, Northamptonshire: CFRP bandaging 144 tie bars (and chain links) wrought iron 28, 35, 38,40, 63,65-7,99-101, 128 end details 39-41 Howard & Ravenhill patent 40-1 steel 39,40 tile creasing 132 Tod (& Son), James, Edinburgh 9 , 4 6 toughness see Glossary

207

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