Sewer Lamp

Tourist attraction · Strand

Sewer Lamp

Tourist attraction · Strand

1

Carting Ln, London WC2R 0DW, United Kingdom

Photos

Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by reley250 (Atlas Obscura User)
Sewer Lamp by jessicahester1 (Atlas Obscura User)
Sewer Lamp by jessicahester1 (Atlas Obscura User)
Sewer Lamp by Betsy Weber/CC BY 2.0
Sewer Lamp by jessicahester1 (Atlas Obscura User)
Sewer Lamp by jessicahester1 (Atlas Obscura User)
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null
Sewer Lamp by null

Highlights

London's last sewer gas lamp, a Victorian marvel  

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Carting Ln, London WC2R 0DW, United Kingdom Get directions

london-walking-tours.co.uk

Information

Static Map

Carting Ln, London WC2R 0DW, United Kingdom Get directions

london-walking-tours.co.uk

Features

wheelchair accessible entrance

Last updated

Aug 7, 2025

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13 Places to Wade Into the Wondrous History of Sewers

"Just off one of London’s bustling streets, there’s a special streetlight that signposts the warren of waste pipes winding beneath the city. By the end of the 19th century, London was trying to shed its reputation as a stinky cesspool. For years, locals had slogged through streets strewn with human waste. Now, it had an expansive sewer network that shuttled these excretions around. Trouble was, that matrix was smelly, too—and full of gas. Engineers proposed various ideas for ventilating the sewers, and one of those schemes included lamps that would burn off the gases from the underground world while illuminating the streets above. Patented by British engineer Joseph Edmund Webb in the 1890s, the so-called “sewer gas destructor lamps” were designed to extract gases from the pipes and burn them off at high heat. (An 1896 notice in The Standard newspaper boasted that the lamps worked by an extractor pipe that “communicates with the sewer and conveys the sewer gas direct to the lamp, where it is subjected to a temperature of 650 degrees to 750 degrees Fahrenheit, thus cremating all the germs and nauseous gases and producing more perfect combustion, whereby the light is much increased.”) This didn’t always work especially well, and revised versions relied on a town’s gas mains, too, to keep a flame perpetually flickering while still also drawing methane from the sewer. Soon, the lamps lined streets in several cities, in England and beyond. A local official from Winnipeg, Canada, returned home from a visit to London in 1907 convinced that his hometown should install some sewer lamps of its own. (The city had already pledged $2,000 to the cause of exterminating foul sewer smells, the Manitoba Morning Free Press reported at the time, and at a cost of $100 apiece—and with a supposed track record of success—the lamps seemed like good bang for the buck.) Most of these lamps are now gone, but you can still find one just off the Strand, not far from Trafalgar Square and Covent Garden. Duck off the Strand and onto Carting Lane, on the west side of the Savoy Theatre and hotel, and descend the steps next to the Coal Hole pub, where you’ll likely find crowds queuing for fish and chips. Continue down the narrow street, past goods being unloaded for the hotel or employees popping out for a quick smoke, and head toward the water. You’ll find the dark-colored, elegantly decorated lamp on the right-hand side, near a fence-mounted plaque that identifies it as “the last remaining sewer gas lamp in the City of Westminster.” Writing in his book The London Nobody Knows, in 1962, British artist and author Geoffrey Fletcher described the hollow iron lamp as a “superb specimen, richly topped with ornament,” and observed that foul smells still occasionally drifted through the air nearby—though these were no “more noxious than cabbage water and the odor of London dinners.” Even so, some locals apparently still refer to Carting Lane as “Farting Lane” in an affectionate jab at its past. This lonely lamp doesn’t look quite as it once did—some reports say it was restored after a run-in with a truck, and others suggest it’s more accurate to describe the lamp as a functional replica. Either way, it’s a reference to the rank, not-so-distant past, and, as the London Metropolitan Archives describes it in the exhibition Underground London, “a street-level reminder of what lies beneath.”" - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/sewer-history
View Postcard for Sewer Lamp

Dave Ockenden

Google
A unique piece of social history engineered by sir joseph Bazalgette, to burn off excess gas from the embankment sewage system. The lamp is now the only remaining one in London and is grade 2 listed. Worth a visit

Peter Griffiths

Google
The last remaining gas lamp running off gas from the London sewers. How cool is that? It’s free to visit and just off the Strand. Avoid the crowds and see the other side of historic London! Think, the effluent generating that gas could be coming from No.1O Downing Street or Buckingham Palace.

jeff benjamin

Google
Part local folklore and wearisome butt of Tourist Guides’ repetitive banter and shtick. This the sole surviving ornamental cast-iron Victorian “sewer gas destructor lamp” in London. An unobtrusive curiosity, easily overlooked, aside a goods entrance on Carting Lane near the Savoy Hotel’s Thames frontage. Gaslighting; from an era when the term referenced a mode of illumination and not psychological manipulation.

Em D

Google
Brilliant piece of history! Not for everyone but I loved it! Hidden away near the Savoy, what's not to love about the sewer lamp!!

Chris Hansen

Google
The soft light of flaming sewer gas provides a constant presence in an otherwise changing world. To stand in the light of its Victorian glow is to hear the gentle whisper of a simpler era - a time before internet, TV, and smartphones - when a community could still find an aesthetically pleasing solution to the unpleasant problem of exploding sewers. The lamp guides our path in the darkness and asks nothing in return save a constant flow of sewage gas to consume in it's undying flame. Best Instagram spot in London!

Ken Shields

Google
So, never seen a poo powered lamp before, every day’s a school day!

dave chamberlain

Google
Incredible amount of time this lamp has been burning…

Dana

Google
Whats not to like about a lamp ? Would appreciate some chairs to sit on while observing it though...