Sabrina 5 canal barge
- LocationGloucester
- Completion DateJun 2017
The Canal & River Trust is a charity that looks after 2,000 miles of waterways, including canals, rivers, reservoirs and docks in England and Wales. It owns the Gloucester Waterways Museum, housed in the heart of what was once the bustling docks.
Back in 2016, the much loved museum was awarded a grant of over £1 million by the Heritage Lottery and other local trust funds. It embarked on an exciting project to adapt one of the vessels in its collection, the ‘Sabrina 5’ barge, to provide a unique new space for events and education.
‘Sabrina 5’ is one of six cargo vessels built in Bristol by Charles Hill and Sons in the mid-1940s. She was designed to move goods from Avonmouth up the River Severn, and the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal. She would have been towed together with other barges, behind a tug, laden with cargoes of copper, zinc, steel and aluminium, and food such as wheat, cheese, cocoa beans and tinned tomatoes.
The historic barge was carefully restored in 1988 and became one of the exhibits at the museum. She has recently undergone an exciting transformation in the dry dock at Gloucester-based T.Nielsen & Company. They converted her hold into a fully equipped space for education and exhibitions; private meeting or party hire, and she now welcomes visitors of all ages.
‘Sabrina 5’ is part of the National Historic Fleet, which also includes boats of such importance as the Cutty Sark and HMS Victory. Whilst Nielsen’s added the necessary insulation and electrical services for its new purpose, they were careful to keep the profile of the original barge as far as possible. They were able to keep the original floor boards and hatch boards, along with the beams which would have supported the covering over the cargo.
As the barge isn’t used every day, The Canal & River Trust was looking for a heating solution that could provide constant background heat, rather than space heating for occupation. The Trust considers green technologies wherever possible and the funders put it high on their list of priorities.
The Trust worked with Nielsen’s to investigate the suitability of a range of green energy solutions. They initially looked into Solar PV, but felt that there were too many risks associated with it. Heat pumps were a good solution, because the large mass of water in the dock provides an unlimited heat source. What is a Ground Source Heat Pump?Ground Source Heat Pumps
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Alex Ball, Project Development Manager at The Canal & River Boat Trust, said:
She continues: