gasholder guide frame at Beckton Gasworkds
A brief introduction to Listed places Post-War Architecture

A Brief Introduction to Gasholders

Gasworks once brought light and warmth to homes across England. Hundreds of their most prominent landmarks – gasholders – are now being demolished and lost from the landscape forever.

Gasworks once brought light and warmth to homes across England.

Hundreds of their most prominent landmarks, gasholders, are now being demolished and lost from the landscape forever.

A drawing of a working gasholder.
Coal barges being unloaded at a gasworks with a gasholder in the foreground. © Historic England Archive. AA029323.

Gasholders are contentious and evocative, loved and loathed by sections of society.

Some of the best examples have been listed, and we have photographed others before they are gone.

Who invented Gaslight?

The inventor William Murdoch pioneered gas light in England in the 1790s. The gas was made by burning coal in ovens called ‘retorts’. Once it was produced, ‘coal gas’ needed somewhere to be stored: a gasholder.

The basic form of gasholder was first used by chemists in laboratories, comprising a small upturned metal vessel, or ‘bell’ as it became known, in a tank of water that made a gas-tight seal.

A photograph of a retort house used for producing coal gas.
A retort house for producing coal gas at Fakenham Gasworks, Norfolk, now a museum. © Crown Copyright. Historic England Archive. BB93/10504.

Gasholders are sometimes erroneously called gasometers, a name related to these early laboratory vessels that also measured the gas volume. However, they gradually grew larger and were essentially containers rather than ‘meters’.

From Gasworks to Gasholders

In the early 1800s, gas was used to light factories and textile mills. The earliest surviving remains of a gasworks in the world are at Dolphinholme, a small village in Lancashire.

The gasworks built in 1811 produced coal gas to light the textile mill, the village street and the mill manager’s house. It is now protected as a scheduled monument on private land.

The world’s first public gasworks was built at Westminster in 1813. Gas lighting would spread to towns and cities across England.

Initially, gasholders had to enclose brick buildings known as ‘gasholder houses’. The gas bell was attached to a chain hung over a roof beam and balanced with a weight at the other end. This allowed it to be floated by the gas and steadily rise in the water tank as it was filled.

A photograph of an octagonal gasholder house.
The Grade II listed octagonal gasholder houses at Warwick, which originally contained gasholders. © Chris Allen.

Built in 1822, the octagonal gasholder houses at Warwick are unique in England but no longer retain the gasholders inside. The practice was abandoned when it was realised the enclosures trapped any escaping gas, increasing the likelihood and consequences of an explosion.

Instead, gasholders would be located out in the open air. The most distinctive visual element was the guide frame, a circular metal structure comprising a frame of metal uprights (often columns) and horizontal girders.

The guide frame supported the metal gas vessel or bell floated by the gas within a circular water tank. The bell had wheels attached to it which ran on vertical rails attached to the frame so that it could rise as it was filled or fall as it was emptied of gas.

A black and white photograph of a gasholder.
The world’s oldest surviving gasholder, built in 1829 in Fulham, London. The gas vessel or ‘bell’ can be seen in this image, rising from a below-ground tank. The bell runs on wheels against guide rails attached to the cast-iron tripods surrounding it.

Eventually, the bell became telescopic, consisting of interlocking sections situated one inside the other; when the inner one was fully extended, the outer one would also start to rise. The tank was often below-ground and built of stone, brick or concrete, but occasionally it could be built as an above-ground metal tank.

Gasholders with a guide frame of cast-iron columns were predominant until the late 19th century. Initially, these frames comprised just three columns linked by girders. An early alternative for larger gasholders was the use of free-standing cast-iron tripods.

A black and white photograph of a gas lamp with gasholder behind.
A gas lamp in the foreground with the guide frames of the Kings Cross gasholders in the background. © Historic England. AA073057.

Indeed the oldest surviving gasholder in the world, the only Georgian example, is Gasholder No. 2 in Fulham, London, built in 1829, which takes this form.

Nonetheless, between the 1840s and 1890s, most guide frames were composed of cast-iron columns. These were architecturally-elaborate gasholders with classical architectural features such as Tuscan capitals.

A photograph of a gasholder guide frame.
A gasholder guide frame with cast-iron columns at Preston, Lancashire. The top of the gas bell can be seen as it rests empty within the below-ground tank. © Historic England Archive. DP186260.

Those at Kings Cross and Bromley-by-Bow, London, with a unique grouping of 7, are among the finest ever constructed.

Reinvention in the 19th century

The period from the 1870s to the 1890s saw massive changes in the design of gasholder guide frames using wrought iron and steel.

Gasholders became major feats in civil engineering. One branch of gasholder design combined large latticework metal uprights, essentially functioning as buttresses, with horizontal girders.

A photograph of a gasholder guide frame.
At the former Beckton Gasworks in London, a gasholder guide frame with latticework metal uprights acting as buttresses. © Historic England Archive. DP183472.

The most prominent example is Gasholder No. 1 at Kennington, London, built in 1877, built next to The Oval cricket ground.

It formed part of the urban landscape and the atmosphere on match days. One cricket commentator once mused: ‘As the bowler runs in, it’s so quiet you can hear the creak of the gasometer’.

Another branch of gasholder design was the development of guide frames as cylindrical ‘lattice shells’. These had exceptionally thin metal uprights combined with diagonal beams, reducing the use of horizontal girders until they could be emitted altogether.

A photograph of a gasholder.
Gasholder No 13, Old Kent Road, London, with an exceptionally thin metal guide frame that acts as a three-dimensional cylinder or ‘lattice shell.’ © Historic England Archive. DP182523.

The revolutionary prototype is Gasholder No. 13, Old Kent Road, London, built in 1879, one of the most technologically and structurally innovative gasholders ever made.

It inspired the development of helical or geodesic structures, a form later seen in Barnes Wallis airframes for aeroplanes (1930s), Buckminster Fuller’s Domes (1950s), and even the skyscraper known as the Gherkin, London.

A photograph of a gasholder.
A gasholder built in 1909 in Dartford, Kent. © Historic England Archive. AA022867.

In 1890, the next major gasholder development occurred with the construction of the first spiral-guided gasholder.

These gasholders no longer had a guide frame but only a telescopic bell that rose, as it was filled with gas, in a cork-screw or spiral motion. Spiral-guided gasholders, widely built worldwide, became the predominant form in the 20th century.

A photograph of a spiral guided gasholder.
Arguably of much less visual interest than earlier gasholders, a 20th century ‘spiral-guided’ gasholder without a guide frame but with the three stages of the gas bell fully inflated/telescoped in Weymouth, Dorset. It also has an above-ground metal tank. © Historic England Archive AA003410.

Decline and New Uses of Gasholders in the 21st century

Following the discovery of natural gas under the North Sea in 1965, the gas network underwent a massive conversion process.

Coal gas stopped being used in favour of natural gas transported and eventually stored in the pipelines. Gasholders became redundant and began to be demolished in large numbers from about 2000 onwards.

Some gasholders have found inventive new uses. The guide frames of the gasholders at Kings Cross now surround apartment blocks and a park. A similar scheme is set to be built at Kennington.

A photograph of a restored gasholder repurposed for apartments.
The restored gasholder guide frames now surrounding apartments and a park next to the canal at Kings Cross, London. © Historic England Archive. DP220107.

In Oberhausen, Germany, a gasholder is now an epic exhibition space, whilst in Vienna, Austria, there is a neighbourhood built in four gasholders known as ‘Gasometer City’.

These iconic structures will therefore continue to serve as valuable reminders of a bygone age.


Written by Seb Fry, Listing Adviser in the London and the South East Region.

Further reading

24 comments on “A Brief Introduction to Gasholders

  1. Graham Wade

    Excellent article – now I know!

    • Peter Grimshaw

      Reminds me of the welcoming smell at my English Electric Rugby apprenticeship

  2. Paul Gurley

    I found this very interesting. They are landmarks. One near me gas recently been demolished.

  3. Michael Morey

    I can remember the gasholders in Chorley Lancashire (recently demolished) being repainted in a striking brown/cream pattern following their spiral guides with red hand rails, ‘celebrating’ their shape and existence rather than trying to paint them sky blue (to blend in with the sky my mum said)

    • Amanda Joy Read

      I passed it every day and night ,it was always an iconic view to me. i thought they would be forever in the landscape. I think there is a swimming baths there now. Long time passed.

  4. You don’t know what you’ve missed ’till it’s gone!

  5. Colin Marr

    This is brilliant brief history of English gasholders, which used to be familiar features in our cityscape. It is particularly pleasing to see recognition of the pioneering geodesic structure in the Dartford 1909 example. What a pity Historic England didn’t recognise this when in 1996 they refused to list the earliest 1892 example of Cutler’s geodesic design at Hornsey Gasworks, sadly since demolished.

    • The Dartford one is being demolished now for redevelopment of the land. Such a shame these landmarks are disappearing.

    • Colin – I didn’t realise you had applied for listing in 1996. I think we applied for listing of EG1 a year or so after that. In connection with that might be grateful if you emailed me. marymillsmmmmm@aol.com

  6. Very interesting, thank you.

  7. Dave Blackburn

    I was involved in the de-commissioning work associated with the Kings Cross holders. It is interesting that the superb column structures are now re-erected about 400m north of their original position. There is another former holder site in Dublin where one column structure has been made into an apartment block with the original tank of a second made into an underground car park.
    It is worth mentioning that each holder lift, seals using a water trough rim. The depth of water dictates the maximum pressure the holder can take. This was usually quite low, about 0.4psi. The water in the troughs was heated in very cold weather, if it froze you had big trouble.

    • Yes I was involved here too! The triplet (three gasometers linked togther) had to be relocated because of the HS1. However my clients, Argent, who were very forward-thinking, offered to store them during the construction of Kings Cross Central and re-erect them at the same time endowing them with new uses. One of the gasholders now has the most sought-after flats in the area!

  8. So pleased to see the Old Kent Road, Peckham gasworks frame is featured in the article. Always took a look out the train window on my to-and-fro short regular overground rides between Queens Road Station and London Bridge as the rail route skirted around the impressive filigree fairy ring of this Victorian wrought iron structure appearing variously in different weathers and seasons a dour wintry memory of industrial dirt and gassy airborne odour to its present rusted dainty loneliness rising above urban sprawl a silhouetted lattice. With progress of the train a crinolined lady occasionally twirled against rosy sunset skies. Above ‘the lady’, crisscrossed with its own noxious lattice, Heathrow’s horrid aeroplane vapour trails evince no art whatsoever.

  9. Peter Goodman

    This is a fascinating article. More like this please.

  10. Ian West

    Great stuff. I particularly appreciated the explanation of the correct nomenclature!

  11. My compliments!
    Such a pity I can’t contribute (yet) my phd “Der Gasbehälter als Bautypus”, which is thought as an encyclopaedia – but written in German…

  12. What is not very well known if at all is that between WWI and WWII in London the sites of some old gas holders were used as secret deep underground control centres against expected enemy bombing after removing upper parts leaving deep hole below. Well known sites are: There is one where the old gasworks were in Monck street Victoria near houses of parliament which is now an atomic bomb shelter and used as control room during the first gulf war.( can’t see on google street maps as government buildings there now, but deep below?) The other one in north London under Camden market if no one has wondered why such a valuable piece of land has not been built on.

  13. Many years ago before present block was built it was proposed by a diving centre based in north of UK that the gasholder next to the canal at Kings Cross, London, would be turned into a deep underwater pool for training divers. It probably is still secret, but project was dropped as funding problem. I don’t know if planning permission was applied for but doubt it due to secrecy of project. Evidently owners of present build came up with much more money!

  14. I hadn’t seen this before – happily, I am not going through all of it – no time really – but can I say as one major point that at the start you need to distinguish between gas making plant and gas works for public supply. They are different and have different histories. Glad you note Old Kent Road 13 – without saying anything about the ideas behind it. (how dare you!!) and so on and on and on. Getting back now to finishing my biography of George Livesey – don’t suppose you will read it though.

  15. – and – I am personally still reeling from the demolition of EG1 – everyone knew it should have been listed – except apparently EH. I am currently fuming at the destruction of the (unique) tank of EG2 for the wretched Silvertown Tunnel by TfL. If anyone did a proper recording of it – which we lobbied for – please let me know because no one has told us. And by a proper recording I mean a proper recording not just some archaeologists looking for the wretched Romans,

  16. Mr Carl Ashcroft

    I live in Bolton near Manchester. (Born, bread and will be laid to rest there). I was absolutely devastated when our gas holders on Walker Street were demolished. They were an integral part of the view of the town from the terrace on Queens Park, my favourite view in the entire world. It may seem dumfouding to some people, but to me they were a sacred part of the town I love, and should therefore have been listed and saved. Nobody seems to care about anything nowadays, politicians know the price of everything and the value of nothing. It’s very sad.

    • What a great saying Carl: “politicians know the price of everything and the value of nothing”.
      And it’s so true,
      Guess you could use it for more than just politicians as well.

  17. Linda Berlin

    With the death of Shane McGowan a few days ago I listened to my Pogues albums and heard Dirty Old Town, A song I have always loved and wondered about “gasworks”. Also, in the movie The Dead, Angelica Houston cries over the death of her first love, ” A delicate boy who was in the gas works “. So here I am, following threads to this wonderful article which is a tremendous help and beautiful photos to boot. The apartment building in the cradle of the framework is brilliant!

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