Minne Lusa Pumping Station

The Minne Lusa Pumping Station was located along John J. Pershing Drive in the Florence neighborhood of North Omaha, Nebraska. The station, which was surrounded by settling basins, was the main source for pumping, filtering, and distributing Missouri River water throughout the City of Omaha. The station was the namesake of the Minne Lusa neighborhood located immediately to the south.

Minne Lusa Pumping Station
General information
Town or cityOmaha, Nebraska
CountryUnited States
Coordinates41°20′7″N 95°57′18″W
Construction started1888
Completed1889
Demolished1970
ClientMetropolitan Utilities District
Design and construction
ArchitectMendelssohn, Fisher and Lawrie

About

Designed by notable Omaha architects Mendelssohn, Fisher and Lawrie, the building was constructed at the Florence Water Works between 1888 and 1889. A large public opening was held August 1, 1889.[1] The main pumping station was a massive building of Warrensburg sandstone with a central tower rising four stories over the arched entrance. The building housed the high service pump and huge boilers that filtered water flowed to the city water mains.[2] The structure was 120 feet by 160 feet, and entirely illuminated by electric lights.[1]

The building was partially demolished and remodeled in the 1960s and is currently undergoing another renovation. The building continues to operate as the pump station for the Florence Water Treatment Plant and also houses the Metropolitan Utilities District (MUD) Heritage Room.

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gollark: In creative mode, or what?
gollark: AE2 autocrafting is *reasonably fast*, and it can run through complex trees of intermediate products without the hassle of a billion slower pipes.
gollark: No, AE2 is probably still better.
gollark: Because, as I said, OC involves loads of random parts which you don't need many of, so it's more efficient to manufacture it on general-purpose manufacturing equipment than to make a complex expensive special-purpose factory for every random part.

See also

References

  1. Jeffrey S. Spencer [researcher and writer], Kristine Gerber [project director] (2003). Building for the ages : Omaha's architectural landmarks (1st ed.). Omaha, Neb.: Omaha Books. p. 19. ISBN 0-9745410-1-X.
  2. Federal Writer's Project. (1939) Omaha: A Guide to the City and Environs. Omaha: Omaha Public Library. p. 244.


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