JMB
  • JMB
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14 years ago
Not a mine!

Inchindown is the site of underground oil fuel tanks near Invergordon. These will be open next week for a couple of days but I would think all the tickets will have gone by now!

The RCAHMS have pictures of the site on Canmore

Links to pictures of the site have been published again by the RCAHMS

http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/173294/digital_images/inchindown+royal+navy+fuel+tanks/?&sort_typ=archnum&sort_ord=asc&show=all 

http://goo.gl/TWhHx 

http://www.forestry.gov.uk/forestry/INFD-8BWKJ6 


BBC1 The One Show filmed there last month and the film should go out August or September. I spent a couple of days helping slide people into the tank but I chickened out of the 18 inch diameter eight steel tube to get in the tanks!

There is a similar site at Wea Fea near Lyness and some pictures of there on Canmore though not as detailed.

MB
Martin Briscoe
Fort William
Morlock
14 years ago
There's also a similar one at Dover.
JMB
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13 years ago
Not been told direct but this is in the ARCH Highland newsletter.




Quote:

WW2 constructed Inchindown oil storage tanks, near
Invergordon, are to feature on the BBC’s One Show at
7pm on 17 January. Built into the hillside and situated on
private land these amazing tunnels, some of which are an
incredible 13.5m high, are normally only accessible
through arranged tours - so this is the perfect opportunity
to find out more about a special Highland site.




Also on the RCAHMS website


Quote:

RCAHMS Goes Underground with The One Show

12 January 2012

RCAHMS archaeological investigator Allan Kilpatrick is to feature on BBC One’s The One Show, leading a film crew into a secret Second World War fuel store.

Accessible only by hidden tunnels, the Inchindown facility was built between 1938 and 1941 as a bomb-proof underground store with the capacity to hold up to 32 million gallons of fuel. A four mile long pipeline linked the depot to the Royal Naval dockyard and port facility at Invergordon. One of three secret stores constructed in Britain, Inchindown would have served as the main source of fuel for the Navy had the nation’s ports been blockaded by Germany.

Once inside the facility, Allan and the film crew had to lie flat on trolleys to be pushed through a narrow 2.5m long access pipe into one of the six giant fuel tanks. Up to 237m long, 13m high and 9m wide, the largest tanks are longer than York Minister. This is the first time that the inside of Inchindown has ever been filmed.

“The history of Inchindown is fascinating, and working with the BBC provides a great opportunity to tell its story to a wider audience” said Allan, who originally surveyed the fuel store for RCAHMS in 2009, and has since given guided tours of the building during Highland Archaeology Festival. “The scale of the place is awe-inspiring – it’s almost unbelievable to imagine that there is a space the size of six cathedrals carved out of solid rock inside a highland hillside.”

“The men who created Inchindown were sworn to secrecy - not even their families knew exactly what they were doing, but they asked no questions. Working on the site gave them tunnelling experience and as a result many of them went on to Hydro-Electric construction projects across Scotland. Taking a film crew into this site for the first time will not only help tell the story of a remarkable place, but also of the remarkable people who worked around the clock to build it as part of the war effort.”

The One Show featuring Allan Kilpatrick and the Inchindown fuel store will be broadcast on 17 January on BBC One at 7pm.




Martin Briscoe
Fort William
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