Public infrastructure is known for being utilitarian, uninspiring and downright ugly. But not always. At first glance, this giant water storage system under Houston looks more like the pillared nave of an ancient cathedral. Now the lost space that’s larger than a football field is open for visits.
All images: Buffalo Bayou Partnership
The Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern was built in 1926 to supply drinking water to the growing Texas city. Over 56 million litres of water were stored here until the 1970s, when a mysterious leak was discovered that eventually put the reservoir out of commission. In 2010, as the land above the cistern was being transformed into a park, architects pried open a hatch and were stunned at the cave-like room filled with 221 columns.
The restoration process included installing walkways and railings so the public can now experience the beauty of the subterranean treasure. At first, all water was drained out so the room could be cleaned. “But then we put the water back in,” Anne Olson, president of the partnership that manages the park, told Next City. “Because one of the beauties of the site is that it has these incredible reflections.”
Like London’s Thames Tunnel or DC’s Dupont Underground subway station, these long-abandoned feats of engineering are being re-opened and re-appreciated by new audiences who are transforming relics of a city’s past into a new kind of civic space. Like those spaces, the cistern was once slated for demolition — and at one point, planned to be a parking garage (???) — until the city saw the value of keeping it around.
Took a tour of the #bbpcistern on opening weekend & just blown away. This thing holds 15 million gallons of water! pic.twitter.com/c6ASTQXZXp
— Jessica T. McFall (@JessicaTMcFall) May 14, 2016
The cistern officially opened last weekend, and tickets can now be purchased for visits, although it looks like they’re sold out for quite some time. For those who don’t have tickets or can’t make it all the way to Texas, a periscope at the surface gives a peek at what lies beneath. You can even “view” it through a fairly convincing web experience that recreates the feeling of discovering the cistern for the first time.