River Effra (Sewer) - A Decade Of Southern Division Associated Drainage, London 2010 -2019.
Well, there's unquestionably more to everybody's favourite tourist drain 'RUBIX' which is essentially a storm relief which serves the Effra and is typically a very small piece in a fairly widespread jigsaw puzzle
The River Effra is one of London's great lost waterways. Rising near Crystal Palace, its course flows through Norwood, Dulwich, Herne Hill, Brixton and Kennington, before finally emptying into the Thames beside Vauxhall Bridge
Forever on a back burner this one, it was the start of the decade when I first bothered with the Effra, having dipped my toe in at an overflow near West Norwood I had every intention of returning back the following week
It was early 2013 before I managed to return to this lot having tried to cram as much other stuff into them short visits as I could back then
A good chunk of Rubix and other associated downstream pics are from that era and have sat gathering dust since
There's certainly a lot going on with the Effra and it's associated branches, interceptors & relief's that it's took a good chunk of time completing the bigger picture
I was averaging a trip into this lot every two years and at this rate was never going to accomplish anything so this past year or so I decided to put that straight!
Where's the Effra?
It became covered over piecemeal in the 1820's and was fully culverted by 1865 into brick sewers
Joesph Bazalgette's main drainage scheme incorporated 3 new intercepting sewers running West to East which "interrupted" the Lost River Effra along it's course
Crucially these intercepting sewers now drained away most of what remained of the old River
In 1859 the Effra Branch Sewer was completed further to the 3 interceptors which conveys South London's sewage into the Southern Outfall Sewer towards Crossness
By 1911 the Southern High Level No.2 had been completed to further alleviate the main drainage network South of the Thames
By this point depending on peoples perspective, the River Effra was either improved or 'lost' having existed for centuries without a distinct name and only acquiring one prior to it vanishing from sight
So, where does it start and where does it end ? hopefully what follows will best explain...
The Effra main line re-starts in Dulwich Village, ahead of a diversion known as the '1859 Effra Branch Sewer' which in turn is intercepted by the later addition of the Southern High Level Sewer No. 2
We dropped into a 4ft egg, it was reasonably clean, with a faint whiff of fresh, yet just a trickle from a couple of small diameter side pipes and a few stale turds parked up
After a short stoop, we ended up in a chamber with some weir boards and a small sluice blocking the way on
I was hoping this was the upstream re-start of the Effra after the diversion with the amount of time staring at maps.. Sure enough it was as I peered over
Still nursing a broken foot, I sent Ginge over with my camera for a closer look
Over the boards, is the Effra Branch Sewer, basically an interceptor that runs S.E via a sizeable 10ft brick barrel towards Greenwich
Looking upstream where it runs from Crystal Palace/Upper Norwood, more on that lot later..
Looking downstream, as it runs towards New Cross
Some badass flow!
Eventually it's intercepted by the Southern High Level Sewer No.2 with additional spill flows forwarded over to Deptford via the continuation of the existing Effra Branch Sewer and subsequently merging with the High Level No.1 by Greenwich pumping station, (formerly Dulwich) and transferred into the Southern Outfall Sewer No.2 towards Crossness
With me so far ?
Next up we head downstream via the 'Half Moon Branch' of the Effra, around ¼ mile later we hit an overflow which marks the start of the Effra Storm Relief below, constructed in 1985
It's around 5ft at this point; ahead oak boards restrict the downstream line
There's also a couple of left over nuggets to make it look a little more authentic
From the other side of the boards, the continuation of the Half Moon Branch via a 5ft brick egg, another local branch can be seen joining from Dulwich Village
Excuse the crappy phone pic looking back upstream
As we approached the South side of Herne Hill after a tedious stroll we came across this 3 way split
Middle = Effra Sewer, Right = Local Sewer, Left = A branch of the Effra that runs a short distance up Herne Hill
A short distance down and another junction, this time the Norwood Road Branch of the Effra joins
In 2013, and despite the relief sewers, this entire lot couldn't cope and the whole area flooded!
The flow picks up a fair bit and the sewer shapes up to a 6ft barrel as we head downstream a good ½ mile before anything more notable
Speaking of which, further downstream is another small CSO which again forwards spill flows to the nearby Effra Storm Relief Sewer
As the sewer runs below Brixton Water Lane it turns 90° towards Effra Road
On the left, the remains of a dis-used sewer, the connection has long been truncated
Round the corner is a hell of a racket, considering the incoming sewer is just over 4ft
Looking downstream, you can just about see the Streatham Hill sewer (Water Lane Branch) joining the flow ahead of a CSO beyond the weir boards
This is the first notable feature of the South West Storm Relief (Rubix), first constructed in 1923
Careful side stepping this one, it does it's best to claim yer legs!
Here a f0sheye special looking upstream from back in the day, a 3ft branch sewer also joins from Tulse Hill
We'll come back to Rubix later in the report, for now we'll carry on in the Effra main line as it continues downstream through a 6ft barrel towards Brixton
This awkward section of 6ft brick pipe was constructed 1862 - 1863 and is fairly featureless a good distance as it heads below Effra Road
Eventually a soft curve runs it below Brixton Road
Here construction changes to a much larger and impressive 2.5m (approx) brick arch, the brickwork is notably much older; circa. 1847 according to research
It's a good 1km slog negotiating the fast flowing line of the Effra Sewer as it continues to run below Brixton Road, East of Stockwell to a point of significant change
Beyond the brick arch in the following pic, the change in construction marks the end of the Effra
Excuse another crappy phone pic looking back upstream
This entire section below Brixton Road was reconstructed in 1973 when the Brixton Storm Relief was implemented, more on that towards the end of the thread...
The Effra sewer was already intercepted via the 1859 Southern High Level Sewer No.1 by this point, just re-jigged to pass through the overflow chamber via cast iron carriers
There's a fair bit going on here, so allow me a few pics to explain..
Firstly, on the R.H.S you can see the flow continues to head an Easterly direction, infact this marks the end of the Effra as we know it
*It merges with the Southern High Level No.1 and in turn eventually dumps it's load into the Southern Outfall Sewer No.2 over by Greenwich pumping station heading to Crossness STW
Good luck walking down that lot!
*Note the aforementioned Southern High Level Sewer No.1 cuts through a cast iron conduit before emerging the other side where the Effra converges as seen in the above pic ^
Here in the below pic taken by Ginge from within the continuation of the High Level No.1 looking back towards my good self whilst stood in the final stretch of the Effra sewer
Since Victorian times this ancient river has been lost from sight, flowing through subterranean passages and drains deep beneath the city streets
The etymology of the name "Effra" has been much disputed. There is no evidence that it was applied to the stream before the late 18th century, and early 19th century gazetteers gave it no name
A map of 1744 refers to it as the "Shore", and it was also referred to as "Brixton Creek" and "the Wash". "Effra" may be inherited from Proto-Germanic ēþrō via Old English ǣðre, which means "runlet of water, fountain, spring, stream"
Well, there's unquestionably more to everybody's favourite tourist drain 'RUBIX' which is essentially a storm relief which serves the Effra and is typically a very small piece in a fairly widespread jigsaw puzzle
The River Effra is one of London's great lost waterways. Rising near Crystal Palace, its course flows through Norwood, Dulwich, Herne Hill, Brixton and Kennington, before finally emptying into the Thames beside Vauxhall Bridge
Forever on a back burner this one, it was the start of the decade when I first bothered with the Effra, having dipped my toe in at an overflow near West Norwood I had every intention of returning back the following week
It was early 2013 before I managed to return to this lot having tried to cram as much other stuff into them short visits as I could back then
A good chunk of Rubix and other associated downstream pics are from that era and have sat gathering dust since
There's certainly a lot going on with the Effra and it's associated branches, interceptors & relief's that it's took a good chunk of time completing the bigger picture
I was averaging a trip into this lot every two years and at this rate was never going to accomplish anything so this past year or so I decided to put that straight!
Where's the Effra?
It became covered over piecemeal in the 1820's and was fully culverted by 1865 into brick sewers
Joesph Bazalgette's main drainage scheme incorporated 3 new intercepting sewers running West to East which "interrupted" the Lost River Effra along it's course
Crucially these intercepting sewers now drained away most of what remained of the old River
In 1859 the Effra Branch Sewer was completed further to the 3 interceptors which conveys South London's sewage into the Southern Outfall Sewer towards Crossness
By 1911 the Southern High Level No.2 had been completed to further alleviate the main drainage network South of the Thames
By this point depending on peoples perspective, the River Effra was either improved or 'lost' having existed for centuries without a distinct name and only acquiring one prior to it vanishing from sight
So, where does it start and where does it end ? hopefully what follows will best explain...
The Effra main line re-starts in Dulwich Village, ahead of a diversion known as the '1859 Effra Branch Sewer' which in turn is intercepted by the later addition of the Southern High Level Sewer No. 2
We dropped into a 4ft egg, it was reasonably clean, with a faint whiff of fresh, yet just a trickle from a couple of small diameter side pipes and a few stale turds parked up
After a short stoop, we ended up in a chamber with some weir boards and a small sluice blocking the way on
I was hoping this was the upstream re-start of the Effra after the diversion with the amount of time staring at maps.. Sure enough it was as I peered over
Still nursing a broken foot, I sent Ginge over with my camera for a closer look
Over the boards, is the Effra Branch Sewer, basically an interceptor that runs S.E via a sizeable 10ft brick barrel towards Greenwich
Looking upstream where it runs from Crystal Palace/Upper Norwood, more on that lot later..
Looking downstream, as it runs towards New Cross
Some badass flow!
Eventually it's intercepted by the Southern High Level Sewer No.2 with additional spill flows forwarded over to Deptford via the continuation of the existing Effra Branch Sewer and subsequently merging with the High Level No.1 by Greenwich pumping station, (formerly Dulwich) and transferred into the Southern Outfall Sewer No.2 towards Crossness
With me so far ?
Next up we head downstream via the 'Half Moon Branch' of the Effra, around ¼ mile later we hit an overflow which marks the start of the Effra Storm Relief below, constructed in 1985
It's around 5ft at this point; ahead oak boards restrict the downstream line
There's also a couple of left over nuggets to make it look a little more authentic
From the other side of the boards, the continuation of the Half Moon Branch via a 5ft brick egg, another local branch can be seen joining from Dulwich Village
Excuse the crappy phone pic looking back upstream
As we approached the South side of Herne Hill after a tedious stroll we came across this 3 way split
Middle = Effra Sewer, Right = Local Sewer, Left = A branch of the Effra that runs a short distance up Herne Hill
A short distance down and another junction, this time the Norwood Road Branch of the Effra joins
In 2013, and despite the relief sewers, this entire lot couldn't cope and the whole area flooded!
The flow picks up a fair bit and the sewer shapes up to a 6ft barrel as we head downstream a good ½ mile before anything more notable
Speaking of which, further downstream is another small CSO which again forwards spill flows to the nearby Effra Storm Relief Sewer
As the sewer runs below Brixton Water Lane it turns 90° towards Effra Road
On the left, the remains of a dis-used sewer, the connection has long been truncated
Round the corner is a hell of a racket, considering the incoming sewer is just over 4ft
Looking downstream, you can just about see the Streatham Hill sewer (Water Lane Branch) joining the flow ahead of a CSO beyond the weir boards
This is the first notable feature of the South West Storm Relief (Rubix), first constructed in 1923
Careful side stepping this one, it does it's best to claim yer legs!
Here a f0sheye special looking upstream from back in the day, a 3ft branch sewer also joins from Tulse Hill
We'll come back to Rubix later in the report, for now we'll carry on in the Effra main line as it continues downstream through a 6ft barrel towards Brixton
This awkward section of 6ft brick pipe was constructed 1862 - 1863 and is fairly featureless a good distance as it heads below Effra Road
Eventually a soft curve runs it below Brixton Road
Here construction changes to a much larger and impressive 2.5m (approx) brick arch, the brickwork is notably much older; circa. 1847 according to research
It's a good 1km slog negotiating the fast flowing line of the Effra Sewer as it continues to run below Brixton Road, East of Stockwell to a point of significant change
Beyond the brick arch in the following pic, the change in construction marks the end of the Effra
Excuse another crappy phone pic looking back upstream
This entire section below Brixton Road was reconstructed in 1973 when the Brixton Storm Relief was implemented, more on that towards the end of the thread...
The Effra sewer was already intercepted via the 1859 Southern High Level Sewer No.1 by this point, just re-jigged to pass through the overflow chamber via cast iron carriers
There's a fair bit going on here, so allow me a few pics to explain..
Firstly, on the R.H.S you can see the flow continues to head an Easterly direction, infact this marks the end of the Effra as we know it
*It merges with the Southern High Level No.1 and in turn eventually dumps it's load into the Southern Outfall Sewer No.2 over by Greenwich pumping station heading to Crossness STW
Good luck walking down that lot!
*Note the aforementioned Southern High Level Sewer No.1 cuts through a cast iron conduit before emerging the other side where the Effra converges as seen in the above pic ^
Here in the below pic taken by Ginge from within the continuation of the High Level No.1 looking back towards my good self whilst stood in the final stretch of the Effra sewer
Last edited: