St Pancras Lock

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Firstbuilt1819
St Pancras Lock No. 4
St Pancras Lock, 2013
51°32′10″N 0°07′40″W / 51.536186°N 0.127877°W / 51.536186; -0.127877
WaterwayRegent's Canal
CountyCamden
Greater London
Maintained byCanal & River Trust
First built1819
Fall8 feet (2.4 m)
Distance to
Limehouse Basin
4.4 miles (7.1 km)
Distance to
Paddington Basin
3.5 miles (5.6 km)

St Pancras Lock is a lock on the Regent's Canal, in the London Borough of Camden, England. The St Pancras Basin is nearby.

Regent's Canal was authorised by an act of parliament obtained on 13 July 1812, for a canal from Paddington to Limehouse.[1] The directors had decided that all locks would be paired when they first met, but were then sidetracked by proposals to use hydro-pneumatic boat lifts.[2] Operation of a trial lift built at Camden Town was problematic, and after a suggestion by Earl Stanhope in 1815 that they revert to single locks, the proprietors decided to follow their original decision, and so a pair of locks was built at St Pancras, and at the eleven other locations where locks were needed.[3] After some delay caused by financial difficulties, building of the canal resumed in December 1817, and it was officially opened on 1 August 1820.[4] St Pancras lock was built towards the end of the project, being completed in 1819.[5] The use of paired locks was partly to save water, as water could be transferred between the locks, rather than all of it being discharged into the lower pound when a lock was emptied. This made operation of the locks more complex, and so they were permanently manned during the heyday of the canal, with lock-keepers working a shift system to provide 24-hour cover. As the use of the canal declined, in part due to railway competition, manning levels were reduced, and padlocks were used to prevent operation of the locks at the weekends. Following the end of commercial traffic and the growth of leisure boating, the locks reverted to operation by boat crews, and in order to prevent flooding caused by incorrect operation of the paddles, in the 1980s the gates were removed from the northernmost lock, and a weir and spillway were constructed at the lower end.[6]

Below the lock, the canal turns through a right-angled bend and is carried over the railway lines into Kings Cross station by an iron aqueduct. In 1939, stop locks were installed at both ends of the aqueduct, to limit damage to the railway in the event of damage to the structure by bombing.[7]

Geography

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