Conduit House

Conduit House

The Conduit House is part of the monastic waterworks which supplied nearby St Augustine's Abbey.

The remains of this medieval conduit house stand in King’s Park, Canterbury, on a steep west-facing hillside to the east of St Augustine’s Abbey, whose spring water supply it was built to protect.

A reliable supply of fresh water was an essential element of the infrastructure of a monastic community. The location of rivers and streams was often a significant factor in deciding the precise site of monastic houses, but within a town local supplies might be polluted.

In such cases clean water had to be piped in from a spring; the water flowed through pipes that were made of lead or hollowed-out tree trunks.

Arrangements such as this were well known in the medieval period. Sources of water on a higher level than the monastery were tapped and small buildings were constructed to cover the collecting and settling tanks at the spring.

Venue Category: 
Historic Buildings & Monuments
Associated Organisation: 
Activities provided: 
Guided Tour
Observing
Science
Technology
Activities for people with SEN/Disabilities: 
No
Curriculum: 
Citizenship
Design
History
PSHE (Personal, Social and Health Education)
Religious Education
Science
Technology / Engineering
Suitability: 
Key Stage 3 (12-14)
Key Stage 4 (15-16)
Key Stage 5 (17+)
Residential?: 
No
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0
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Venue Address: 
Kings Park
Canterbury
Kent
CT1 1TF
United Kingdom
Venue Contact Number: 
0870 333 1181

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