Foss Island Power Station


Foss Island Power Station, also known as York Power Station, was a small 40 MW coal-fired power station serving the city of York.
It was located in the Layerthorpe area of the city, to the east of the city centre.
It was built by York Corporation in the 1890s, opened in February 1900 and closed on 25 October 1976.
In 1923 the station was supplying 3-phase AC at 400 and 230 V; DC at 460 and 230 V; and DC for traction at 500 V. The steam turbine driven AC generators comprised two 1,250 kW and two 3,500 kW machines. DC current was produced by two 500 kW oil-driven machines. Electricity supplies were supplemented by a water powered generating station near Linton-on-Ouse, which was commissioned in 1923 and comprised a 250 kW and a 500 kW generator. In 1923 the facilities at York generated 15.128 GWh of electricity. The sales of electricity produced a surplus of revenue over expenses of £26,938 for the Corporation.
The steam plant at Foss Island were chain grate stoker boilers capable of delivering 400,000 lb/h of steam at 400 psi and 399/427°C. The generating capacity of the station was 40 MW. Steam condensing and cooling was by river water and a single concrete cooling tower. In the year ending 31 March 1972 the station delivered 54.772 GWh of electricity, its load factor was 16.4 percent.
The electricity output from the station, in GWh, was as follows.The buildings were demolished around 1980 and the transmission line which ran from the power station to a substation at Tang Hall Lane was dismantled at around the same time.