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Buying
an old
ice
house on
Burnet
Street
and
converting
it into
a coal
burning,
steam
powered
pump
station,
three
private
investors
founded
the New
Brunswick
Water
Utility
in 1863.
Known as
the New
Brunswick
Water
Company,
this
group
installed
two
twenty
inch,
cast
iron
water
mains
from
lower
Burnet
Street
to
Comstock
Street
and
Nichol
Avenue
and two
water
main
control
houses,
constructed
a 9
million-gallon
reservoir,
and
delivered
water to
New
Brunswick
residents
through
a series
of under
ground
water
mains
using a
gravity
feed
system.
In 1873,
New
Brunswick's
municipal
government
took
control
of the
Water
Company
in an
effort
to offer
lower
rates to
city
residents
and
businesses.
Since
then the
New
Brunswick
Water
Department
has been
owned
and
operated
by the
City of
New
Brunswick.
During
the
1920's,
Mayor
Farrington
saw fit
to fund
the
construction
of the
water
treatment
plant
and more
importantly,
the
Farrington
dam. The
dam
secured
a water
source
(800
million
gallons)
for the
residents
of New
Brunswick.
The
treatment
plant
and the
pressure
filter
building
(constructed
in
1935)for
the
first
time
enabled
the City
to
filter
and
disinfect
the
water
from
this
source.
In 1929,
New
Brunswick
pumped
and
treated
approximately
6
million
gallons
of water
a day.
By the
1950's,
the D
and R
canal
was no
longer
used as
a
transportation
device,
and the
City of
New
Brunswick
decided
to
secure
the
canal as
a raw
water
source.
The D
and R
Canal
Pump
Station
was
constructed
and a
30-inch
pipe was
installed
from
Bucceleuch
Park to
Nichol
Avenue.
With
this
construction
New
Brunswick
now had
two
independent
sources
of water
for its
residents.
By the
1960s
the New
Brunswick
Water
Utility
was
pumping
and
treating
22
million
gallons
a day to
the
residents
of the
City as
well as
East
Brunswick
and
Milltown.
The New
Brunswick
Water
Utility
currently
pumps
and
treats
approximately
12.5
million
gallons
of water
a day to
residents
in New
Brunswick,
Milltown
and
Franklin.
Over the
last 9
years,
in an
effort
to
continue
exceeding
tightening
regulations,
the City
has
invested
$11
million
in
capital
improvements
in our
water
system. |