SD8218 : Turbine No 23 and Access Road
taken 10 years ago, 3 km from Waterfoot, Lancashire, Great Britain

Turbine No 23 and Access Road
The Turbine in the centre of the picture is Turbine No 23 which was the very last tower to be completed on Scout Moor in June 2008.
Almost 8 miles of access road had to be built during construction of which a small section can be seen in the picture.
Construction of the wind turbines began back in November 2007 at Turbine No 16.
By June 2008 engineers had constructed 26 wind turbine towers and installed 78 turbine blades 450 metres above sea level on Scout Moor amid adverse weather conditions of thick fog, gale force winds, torrential rain, snow and ice during the winter months of 2008.
SD8218 : Last Turbine Blade Delivery at Turbine No 23
SD8218 : The Final Turbine Blade Arrives on Scout Moor
SD7919 : Last Turbine Tower Delivery to Scout Moor
SD8318 : Scout Moor Turbine Towers 15 and 21
SD8417 : Working on the hub 60 metres up.
SD8218 : Hub of Turbine No 23
Turbine details: Tower Height: 60m
Blade Length: 40m Total Max Height: 100m
Manufacturer: Nordex
Model: N80 Link
Key Facts Link
(Archive Link
)
Scout Moor Wind Farm Construction Picture Gallery
Link
Following a public inquiry held in 2004, planning consent was granted by the Secretary of State on the 25th May 2005 for the building of Scout Moor Wind Farm.
On the 25th of September 2008 dignitaries from across the North West were invited to the official opening of the Scout Moor wind farm.
Children from Edenfield Primary School, who have enjoyed lessons based around the wind farm, were on hand to cut the ribbon at Turbine No 22. Link
Head Teacher at Edenfield Primary School, Janet Reidy, said: "It was superb for the children to be involved after all the work they had done about the wind farm in their lessons.
I think they will all remember this in future years and now they know what it's like to be film stars with all the camera crews there!"
Richard Dibley, wind power development manager at Peel, said at the opening: "We have welcomed people here today to thank them for their patience and understanding during the construction period and for them to see the wind farm in action at close quarters. I think we have chosen the perfect site here as it is more than 50% windier up here than it is in the surrounding area. These turbines will be generating power for years to come using a natural resource that will never run out."
Almost 8 miles of access road had to be built during construction of which a small section can be seen in the picture.
Construction of the wind turbines began back in November 2007 at Turbine No 16.
By June 2008 engineers had constructed 26 wind turbine towers and installed 78 turbine blades 450 metres above sea level on Scout Moor amid adverse weather conditions of thick fog, gale force winds, torrential rain, snow and ice during the winter months of 2008.
SD8218 : Last Turbine Blade Delivery at Turbine No 23
SD8218 : The Final Turbine Blade Arrives on Scout Moor
SD7919 : Last Turbine Tower Delivery to Scout Moor
SD8318 : Scout Moor Turbine Towers 15 and 21
SD8417 : Working on the hub 60 metres up.
SD8218 : Hub of Turbine No 23
Turbine details: Tower Height: 60m
Blade Length: 40m Total Max Height: 100m
Manufacturer: Nordex
Model: N80 Link

Key Facts Link


Scout Moor Wind Farm Construction Picture Gallery
Link

Following a public inquiry held in 2004, planning consent was granted by the Secretary of State on the 25th May 2005 for the building of Scout Moor Wind Farm.
On the 25th of September 2008 dignitaries from across the North West were invited to the official opening of the Scout Moor wind farm.
Children from Edenfield Primary School, who have enjoyed lessons based around the wind farm, were on hand to cut the ribbon at Turbine No 22. Link

Head Teacher at Edenfield Primary School, Janet Reidy, said: "It was superb for the children to be involved after all the work they had done about the wind farm in their lessons.
I think they will all remember this in future years and now they know what it's like to be film stars with all the camera crews there!"
Richard Dibley, wind power development manager at Peel, said at the opening: "We have welcomed people here today to thank them for their patience and understanding during the construction period and for them to see the wind farm in action at close quarters. I think we have chosen the perfect site here as it is more than 50% windier up here than it is in the surrounding area. These turbines will be generating power for years to come using a natural resource that will never run out."
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- Grid Square
- SD8218, 150 images (more nearby
)
- Photographer
- Paul Anderson (find more nearby)
- Date Taken
- Saturday, 6 December, 2008 (more nearby)
- Submitted
- Thursday, 11 December, 2008
- Category
- Wind farm (more nearby)
- Subject Location
-
OSGB36:
SD 828 188 [100m precision]
WGS84: 53:39.9562N 2:15.6526W - Camera Location
-
OSGB36:
SD 833 185
- View Direction
- West-northwest (about 292 degrees)
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