Monday, September 5, 2022

South Heights, PA: Frank R. Phillips Power Station

(Satellite, every thing has finally been removed)

"Formerly operated by Duquesne Light and Orion Power Midwest, served electricity to the Pittsburgh region since 1942. The coal-fueled plant was the site of the first flue gas desulfurization scrubber on a utility power plant in the U.S." [wikimapia] "Duquesne Light built the "scrubber stack" in the 1960s to limit air pollution from the coal-fired plant." [triblive]

Street View, Jul 2007
By the next view, Aug 2011, the buildings were torn down.

Jim DePoe posted
Philips power station 1942 to 1987
John Gallagher: I believe the first boilers and turbines were 1942 or 1943. Additional boilers and turbines were added in later years with #6 Boiler/#4 Unit being installed in the mid-late 1950s. Boilers 1-5 were tied to a common steam headed that supplied Turbines 1-3. The Scrubbers were added in the early-mid 1970s.
https://www.abandonedamerica.us/slideshow244057.html [this page has a photo gallery]
 
Greg Mross posted
A little help here..... Can anyone ID this power plant? I took this image on a trip out east (OH, PA, NY, WV) in June of 1993, but failed to label the slide! DOH! Any help would be appreciated. EDIT: Frank Phillips power plant in South Heights, PA. Thanks for the help!
Charlie Sphar: If I’m not mistaken, this was one of the first power stations that had the scrubber system, online in the early 70’s.
Robert Walker: It is Phillips for certain. That's where I started work in December of 1982. The plant went online in 1941. It had Foster Wheeler roof fired boilers and Westinghouse turbine-generators. The Chemico wet scrubber system was one of the earliest in the country to go online. The plant shut down in the mid 1980's and was torn down a few years ago.
 
Postcard P&LE Train No. 273, passing Phillips Power Station By H. Fogg, PA

𝗥𝗲𝗺𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗵𝗲𝗻: 𝗣𝗲𝗻𝗻𝘀𝘆𝗹𝘃𝗮𝗻𝗶𝗮 posted
The Frank R. Phillips Power Station located in South Heights, Beaver County • 1957.
Phil Jad shared
Terry Haldin: When the station transformers at Cheswick blew up, they took the transformers from Phillips power plant until new ones could built. I was there for both change outs.

Google Earth, Apr 1993

The smokestack and a conveyor belt was still standing in Google Maps accessed in Sep 2022.
3D Satellite

triblive
It took two tries to get the smokestack to fall down with explosives.

1 comment:

  1. Check out the Howard Fogg painting of this power plant as part of his P&LE series.

    ReplyDelete