Hallen and Berwick Wood PSDs (Petroleum Storage Depots) are part a huge fuel storage complex extending into the hills around the village of Hallen (photos alone give no idea of the size) and is a strange mixture of derelict, dormant and very much still in use with big fences, workmen and CCTV cameras.
Established c.1940, the Hallen Air Ministry Fuel Depot was part of a major aviation fuel supply system which had pipelines running across the UK. The depot also had its own HAA site (ST 567 809), now a paintball course and inaccessible without permission.
Usage of the facility continued Post-War and it was considered important and secretive enough not to be marked on any maps until the 1990s.
The majority of the depot is still in use as part of the Government Pipeline and Storage System, a 2,500km network of pipelines run by the Oil and Pipelines Agency for the MOD, supplying RAF Stations and AWE Aldermaston as well as civil airports such as Heathrow and Gatwick.
Work is ongoing to overhaul the depot and there are plans to extend the Severnside Siren system to cover the depot and surrounding area.
Only a small part of the site is derelict outside the perimeter fence and my visit was a hurried one due to the amount of activity happening around about.
Overview. The M5 cuts through the centre of the aerial image.
Entrance to the easternmost (active) tank farm, with CCTV and guard cows (taken from the fence)
Having found the HAA off limits and the southern tank farm still in use, I took a drive to the other side of the hill and the main site.
Plan of the northwestern (Berwick Wood) site: the red-bordered area is still in use and very secure for obvious reasons.
Administrative site
Main gate sign
Site office (right) and motor garage (left)
GPSS marker (no pole with a yellow hat, unusually)
There were two buildings like this. I think these were pump houses: they consist of two identical rooms side by side with separate entrances each with its own (considerable) blast wall, one with what appears to be a small refuge at the end.
Inside there are louvred vents and the remains of ducting as well as some sort of machinery mount.
Hut 1.
Inside hut 1: not much clue to purpose here.
Fuel bunker. The white tanks in the background are the National Grid's Avonmouth LNG storage facility.
Front of fuel bunker.
Detached blast door
Inside
Flame-proof switches and junction boxes were everywhere.
Hut 4 on the hill above the complex. No evidence of electrical connections, machinery mountings or windows, possibly some sort of lookout?
Part of the live site (valves and pump compound). This is very much still active: contractors were busy cleaning the tanks and adjusting the valves and I watched, somewhat amused, for about 15 mins as a large tanker tried unsuccessfully to negotiate the ramp into the depot.
I parked the car opposite this derelict farm. Called Berwick Farm on the map, the land suffers from landfill gas ingress and has been abandoned for some time.
The farmhouse, sadly inaccessible at the time of my visit.
Thanks for reading,
A.
Established c.1940, the Hallen Air Ministry Fuel Depot was part of a major aviation fuel supply system which had pipelines running across the UK. The depot also had its own HAA site (ST 567 809), now a paintball course and inaccessible without permission.
Usage of the facility continued Post-War and it was considered important and secretive enough not to be marked on any maps until the 1990s.
The majority of the depot is still in use as part of the Government Pipeline and Storage System, a 2,500km network of pipelines run by the Oil and Pipelines Agency for the MOD, supplying RAF Stations and AWE Aldermaston as well as civil airports such as Heathrow and Gatwick.
Work is ongoing to overhaul the depot and there are plans to extend the Severnside Siren system to cover the depot and surrounding area.
Only a small part of the site is derelict outside the perimeter fence and my visit was a hurried one due to the amount of activity happening around about.
Overview. The M5 cuts through the centre of the aerial image.
Entrance to the easternmost (active) tank farm, with CCTV and guard cows (taken from the fence)
Having found the HAA off limits and the southern tank farm still in use, I took a drive to the other side of the hill and the main site.
Plan of the northwestern (Berwick Wood) site: the red-bordered area is still in use and very secure for obvious reasons.
Administrative site
Main gate sign
Site office (right) and motor garage (left)
GPSS marker (no pole with a yellow hat, unusually)
There were two buildings like this. I think these were pump houses: they consist of two identical rooms side by side with separate entrances each with its own (considerable) blast wall, one with what appears to be a small refuge at the end.
Inside there are louvred vents and the remains of ducting as well as some sort of machinery mount.
Hut 1.
Inside hut 1: not much clue to purpose here.
Fuel bunker. The white tanks in the background are the National Grid's Avonmouth LNG storage facility.
Front of fuel bunker.
Detached blast door
Inside
Flame-proof switches and junction boxes were everywhere.
Hut 4 on the hill above the complex. No evidence of electrical connections, machinery mountings or windows, possibly some sort of lookout?
Part of the live site (valves and pump compound). This is very much still active: contractors were busy cleaning the tanks and adjusting the valves and I watched, somewhat amused, for about 15 mins as a large tanker tried unsuccessfully to negotiate the ramp into the depot.
I parked the car opposite this derelict farm. Called Berwick Farm on the map, the land suffers from landfill gas ingress and has been abandoned for some time.
The farmhouse, sadly inaccessible at the time of my visit.
Thanks for reading,
A.