The Bazalgette Embankment I: images of work in progress

May 27, 2012. The site before Blackfriars Millennium Pier was moved.

A new public space close to Blackfriars Bridge, has been created by Tideway as part of their extensive work on London’s ‘Super Sewer’. I followed progress there on and off, somewhat randomly, and took photos as I passed over Blackfriars Bridge, or viewed the site from the opposite side of the river.

The cofferdam before completion, left open for a time to allow the removal of silt through the gap.

Co-ordinated work on the ‘SuperSewer’ began in 2016 “with activity taking place at two dozen construction sites from Acton in west London to Abbey Mills Pumping Station in Stratford, east London.”  Over the ten years that the project took to complete, nearly 4000 people with a wide range of skills were able to deliver the project with only a slight delay caused by Covid, which also led to an increase in costs. With allowances made for the massive disruption caused by the pandemic, the enterprise was seen by the press as “a masterclass in bringing a major infrastructure project in on time and within budget.”, APM.

©Wal Daly-Smith, who was operating the Diveco safety boat inside the cofferdam, on hand for divers working below.

Wal Daly-Smith is just one of the several thousand workers employed by Tideway and has worked at several of the Tideway sites including at Blackfriars, where he was employed as a skipper responsible for crews working on maintenance and safety checks.

Eastern cofferdam completed.

The site on January 28, 2019 with workboat MERIDIAN and GPS tug CAMBRIA.

A complex variety of plant and tug MERIDIAN.
February 15, 2019. In the mix, refuelling barges HEIKO and CONQUESTOR.
February 25, 2019. View from the Queen’s Walk on the South Bank.
February 25, 2019. A closer look from the Queen’s Walk, on the South Bank.
February 28, 2022

November 11, 2023, Uber Thames Clippers passing the floodlit site.
February 1st, 2024, RIVER PRINCESS and ONYX OF LONDON with the Bazalgette Embankment site in the background.

April 13, 2024

April 13, 2024

April 13, 2024

April 13, 2024
April 6, 2026
July 1, 2025, finishing touches.

March 28, 2026

Lion’s head mooring ring, March 28, 2026

The existing Lions head mooring rings that lined the embankment at Blackfriars were carefully removed and restored, then replaced when work at the site was completed, as were the celebrated Vulliamy lampposts.

One of the restored Vulliamy lampposts at the top of the Embankment
The view March 28, 2026

The building of this new riverside space means that the northern part of the Thames Path has now become fully accessible and a pleasant place to walk or to run.

April 6, 2023
Drawing attention to the momental work on the tunnel, 48 metres below

View through bridges from some of the benches

There are places to sit at several levels and care has been taken to make most of them wheelchair accessible. There is even space at the end of some benches “to allow wheelchair users to sit alongside.”

The clean granite paving, imaginative planting, striking sculptures, and views of river activity make the Bazalgette Embankment a pleasant place to pass the time.

In my next article I will focus on the artwork ….

Sources and further information
The Bazalgette Embankment: Tideway, Opened to public, January 2026.
Cofferdam construction: Tideway Update , September 2020
Cofferdam removal: Tideway Update, October 2022
The Thames Path National Trail

With the Flow

I

There are windless moments during slack tide when the Thames seems lake-still, perfectly mirroring trees and buildings on its surface but as you walk alongside, it’s the disturbance of tidal ebbs and flows that will catch your eye.

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Notes
All pictures were taken along Lambeth Reach, mostly from Victoria Tower Gardens.
For tide times of the central London River Thames, see: BBC
There is a strong tidal flow along this stretch of the Thames, varying from 4 up to 8 knots.