London Powered an Entire City Without Wires — Through 180 Miles of Water Pipes What powered Tower Bridge for more than eighty years? Not electricity. Not steam. Pressurized water.
This video explores the forgotten London Hydraulic Power Company, the vast underground Victorian infrastructure network that once ran beneath central London and powered some of the city’s most iconic landmarks. From Tower Bridge and the Savoy Hotel to Fleet Street printing presses, dock cranes, theater stage machinery, and industrial lifts, this buried hydraulic system quietly delivered energy through cast iron pipes at extraordinary pressure for nearly a century.
We trace how London built one of the largest hydraulic power networks in history, why it survived alongside the electrical grid for decades, and how it outlasted almost every prediction of its disappearance.
The story covers Edward Bayzand Ellington, hydraulic accumulators, the Blitz, Victorian engineering, underground infrastructure, and the strange economics that shut down a system that was still working.
If you are fascinated by forgotten technology, hidden history, industrial archaeology, London history, or lost infrastructure, this documentary reveals one of the most overlooked engineering systems ever built beneath a major city.