Photographer’s Note
Shot taken at excact 17:03 GMT (18:03 local time), Sunday Oct. 16th. 2005 (See theme for details)
This power plant, Solberfoss, is situated app. 45 km souteast of Oslo.
Solbergfoss is a hydraulic power plant. This means the
turbines are run by power produced by the huge throughflow of water rather than by high waterfalls. The stations currently consist of two different power plants that were built at different times and based on different cultures.
The work on the Solbergfoss I power station commenced
back in 1913. No one had ever built such a large plant before, and no one was completely sure it would work. To optimise the plant’s location and through-flow factors, a life-like model was built on a scale of 1:25 in Nordmarka, the green belt north of Oslo. This allowed ideas to be tested in actual practice.
The project was gigantic and involved a considerable amount of pioneering work. More than 800 men worked on it at times. Although they used the most modern construction machinery available, it would seem like simple equipment today. Most of the work was based on muscle power and sheer brute strength.
The building was designed by Brede Greve, one of that
period’s great architects, and was the focus of a major
architectural competition. Solbergfoss I was built at a time when people were proud to demonstrate their architectural and engineering talents. It is now a cultural monument.
The stately Solbergfoss power station opened in 1924.
However, the demand for electricity grew steadily. In 1979, planning therefore began on a new power station to augment the old one. Solbergfoss II is a completely modern power station featuring a single large turbine that has the same capacity as all 13 turbines in the old station combined. This means that the entire River Glomma can pass through a single turbine.
The Kaplan turbine is more or less like a ship’s propeller with four adjustable blades. It is still one of the largest of its kind in Europe. It has a diameter of 8.3 metres and weighs 170 metric tonnes. Transporting and installing this giant was a feat in itself.
Solbergfoss II began to feed into the grid in the spring of 1985. The new power station was built in accordance with modernday standards. A small building at the edge of a grassy bank is the only visible result. Everything else is underground.
The Solbergfoss power station produces a total of some
900 million kWh during a normal year. This is equivalent to the annual consumption of 45 000 single-family houses heated with electricity, and accounts for 1 per cent of Norway’s total electricity supply.
ballyna, papagolf21, rodoula, kolesn, ChrisJ, jmdaoudal, bertolucci, nwoehnl, Clairedelune, peco85 has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
greg64g
(11193) 2005-10-16 13:49
Hi Jack
Strange mood for this grey building, i like the light and colors from sky. I like a lot the frame, it's very original.
cheers
greg
ballyna
(1689) 2005-10-16 13:54
hi jack,
light is very dramatic here,river is flowing so homely:-)and I am enlightened with your notes,thanks.
regards
Niara78
(0) 2005-10-16 17:15
You definitely embellished the power plant by creating a nice mood and good frame around it :) Nice shot! Thanks for the interesting note!
papagolf21
(57003) 2005-10-16 17:18
Bonsoir Jack,
Une note impressionnante pour une centrale électrique qui possède une puissance pareille !
Au début, les câbles électriques me semblaient gênants, mais je n'avais pas encore vu la note d'accompagnement.
L'ambiance est très bien restituée.
Amitiés.
Philippe
jmdaoudal
(82) 2005-10-17 6:16
Just forgot to go out and Photography :-))
Sure that in Norway at this time the light is going but you replace by electricity use.
This place is very well descried.
I like it
Jean Michel
bertolucci
(12022) 2005-10-17 12:29
Hi Jack, this is striking study in textures. I like the way the water is sanwiched between the rough rock and scuplted concrete. The quality of the lights adds a very nice atmospheric accent. Good job.
Regards from Rotterdam, Bert.
nwoehnl
(120) 2005-10-17 15:25
I totally missed this event, Jack. Nice entry shooting this when something had to be shot. Good framing in which the inclusion and alignment of the foreground rocks enforces the diagonal perspective established by the plant building.
P.S.: I'm on a business trip in Glasgow this week. Not looking good in terms of finding time to shoot photos, I'm afraid, but at least the hotel has free high-speed internet to look at some stuff on TE.
ChrisJ
(70485) 2005-10-18 3:54
Hello Jack
This might work better in b&w. I like thew reflections in the water. Good sharpness overall, & an excellent note.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Jack R Johanson (jrj)
(34779) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2005-10-16
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Nikon D70, Nikkor AFS DX 18-70 ED
- Exposure: f/3.5, 1/50 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Theme(s): Hydro Power Plants in Norway, Power Stations [view contributor(s)]
- Date Submitted: 2005-10-16 13:46








