The lift from River Weaver to the Trent & Mersey Canal is 50.4' (15.4m). It is designated as a Schedule Monument, and it is one of the seven wonders of the waterway. Unlike a lock, a lift consumes very little water from the canal.
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| Andrew Baker commented on the above reel Went up and down in my boat last year, photo attached is looking down from the caisson my boat was in to the top of the trip boat in the caisson below. |
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| CanalRiverTrust Nov 2025: "Please note: The lift is currently closed due to a fault discovered during routine maintenance. It will reopen once repair works are complete, expected early 2027. Keep an eye on this page for updates on the repairs." |
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| CanalRiverTrust "The Anderton Boat Lift is one of only two working boat lifts in the UK and is affectionately known as the Cathedral of the Canals." |
"The unique 150-year-old structure was the world’s first major commercial boat lift and is internationally significant as a feat of engineering design....The Lift requires blast cleaning, repairing and repainting with an innovative technical coating system. Also, installing a new operating system will improve reliability." The Heritage Fund is financed by a national lottery. [CanalRiverTrust_future]
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| 1:20 video @ 0:30 Today's gear driven machinery was added in 1908 to replace the hydraulic lift. The switchover took just four weeks. |
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| bbc, Canal and River Trust "Before the boat lift was built, chutes and slides were used to move goods between the canal and river" The river was made navigable in 1732 to support the local salt industry. Then the canal was built by "pottery entrepreneur Josiah Wedgwood." The 1908 addition converted the lift to electric power. Usage of the lift was very low in the 1960s because of improved road transportation, and it was closed in 1983 because of corrosion. (All of that salt handled in the past caused problems.) It was restored and opened in 2002. In 2025, it needs funding for another restoration. |
The 2002 restoration went back to hydraulic operation, but it uses oil this time. 2002 is also when the visitor center was built. [4:21 video @ 2:35]
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| Image via GracesGuide via TalesFromTheBraziersGrotto, this webpage provides details about the conversions from hydraulic to electric and then back to hydraulic. |
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| GracesGuide, this webpage also has a lot of informative details "For balance and minimum power consumption there were two parallel troughs, one rising while the other descended, although the lifts could be operated independently. Each trough had just one central ram, 3 ft [0.9m] diameter. Each ram and its cylinder were assembled by bolting together three sections. The troughs were guided by cast iron blocks at the four corners, moving in guides in the vertical columns. Movement of water from one ram to the other provided 11/12ths of the lift, the final part being provided by a steam driven hydraulic pump via an accumulator. The hydraulic pressure was 550-670 psi." |
So where is this alternative?
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