Ossett to get 5G boost as plans to install transmitter on water tower approved

A new antenna is to be installed on Gawthorpe Water Tower

Gawthorpe Water Tower
Author: Tony Gardner, Local Democracy Reporting ServicePublished 29th Jan 2025
Last updated 29th Jan 2025

Plans have been approved to improve a town’s 5G coverage by upgrading antennas on a historic water tower.

The scheme involves replacing telecommunications equipment already in place at the century-old Gawthorpe Water Tower.

Cornerstone, a mobile infrastructure service services company, said the work was required to ensure residents in Ossett have access to the latest technology.

The Grade II listed tower was built between 1922 and 1928 but has not been used for water storage since 2006.

The 55m-high structure, on Chidswell Lane, has been used as a host for telecommunications equipment since 1996.

A letter from the company to Wakefield Council said: “The operator is proposing to upgrade their existing installation to ensure the latest high quality, reliable, secure communications technology is able to be provided from this location.

“The amendments to the existing scheme are essential in order that customers’ hand-held devices continue to operate for the purposes in which they have become accustomed, accessible wherever they are, whether that be indoors or outside.”

A heritage statement was submitted with the application to assess the impact of the work on the historic building.

The document said its architectural significance stems from its “strikingly elegant neoclassical design.”

Made from reinforced concrete, it was first listed by Historic England in December 2020 following a campaign by local residents.

The statement said: “As a prominent landmark, it makes a strong architectural statement, reflecting civic pride, and compares favourably with other listed water towers nationally as a distinguished example of a municipal water tower.

“The tower’s historic interest lies in its role as a physical reminder of the significant advancements in health and sanitation during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as developments in public water supply provision.”

The site’s history goes back to the 1876s when a reservoir was built at Gawthorpe as there was no public water supply in Ossett and private wells were inadequate and heavily polluted.

An Act of Parliament in 1922 enabled construction of a waterworks at the former Pildacre Colliery.

The water was drawn up from the mine and pumped from the waterworks to the tower by two engines, fondly known by locals as Maud and Edith.

A council officer’s report said the work would not cause “substantial harm” to the structure and its “special interest” would be maintained

Recommending the scheme for approval, a report said: “The water tower is a prominent landmark.

“The history and use of the structure serves as a reminder of developments in health, sanitation and public water supply provision during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.”

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