Olympic stadium site once used to house a nuclear reactor
Olympic stadium site once used to house a nuclear reactor
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<p>The site for the new Olympic stadium in London has some <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_s ... .stm">dark history</a> - it was once used to house an experimental nuclear reactor.</p>
<p>Fortunately for the athletes, the reactor was the size of a bucket
and generated almost no energy, and used for undergraduate (giant
ants?) and post-graduate (giant ants for the army?) college
experiments. The college campus was moved in the 80's, and the reactor
was decomissioned.
</p><p>Spotted @ <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk">BBC</a></p>
<p>The site for the new Olympic stadium in London has some <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_s ... .stm">dark history</a> - it was once used to house an experimental nuclear reactor.</p>
<p>Fortunately for the athletes, the reactor was the size of a bucket
and generated almost no energy, and used for undergraduate (giant
ants?) and post-graduate (giant ants for the army?) college
experiments. The college campus was moved in the 80's, and the reactor
was decomissioned.
</p><p>Spotted @ <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk">BBC</a></p>
- King of Creation
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There's a nuclear reactor in the engineering building at my friend's school. One day, during winter break, me and him went up there to get some stuff from his apartment, and upon hearing that there was a reactor, I insisted he show it to me. I figured I'd just see the building or whatever, but nope. We walked right in, right up to the reactor room itself. No real security, no people. The reactor was pretty small. Bigger than this bucket sized thing, but still small compared to what people picture when they think of nuclear power plants. It powered the whole campus, and I guess parts of the city, so you can probably imagine.
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- King of Creation
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- King of Creation
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I used to live less than 4 miles from a nuclear reactor. It was decomissioned about a decade ago. One of the sadest days of my life was the day I learned they were cutting the VC up into itty-bitty pieces.
One day I found in the town garage the 50+ year old map of ground zero and the various kill-zones.
One day I found in the town garage the 50+ year old map of ground zero and the various kill-zones.
I miss the good ol' USSA.
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This is kind of digging up an old topic, but just to clarify on this one: WPI's nuclear reactor was designed for its nuclear engineering program, and since that program was nixed some years back, the reactor has been offline. Rumors give it varying amounts of power output ranging from enough for a few 75W bulbs to glow, to enough to assist in powering a building or two. The official capable output (from a proffessor who had worked with it), it was only capable of running a dozen or so computers.
But sure, if anyone wants to look at it, nice lil' door with a thick window through which you can look in at the top of it! (ooo a 10 foot round metal capsule sticking out of the floor!...not nearly as cool as the big ones =\ )
WPI keeps it 'running' (although offline) just because decomishioning costs so much.
Supposedly Worcester had a nice nuke pointed at it once upon a time, though i dont remember the specifics, if it was before or after the installation of the reactor, several other low-key as well as high profile (Nortons) manufacturers of military and industrial parts were here at the time, so it might not have been.
But sure, if anyone wants to look at it, nice lil' door with a thick window through which you can look in at the top of it! (ooo a 10 foot round metal capsule sticking out of the floor!...not nearly as cool as the big ones =\ )
WPI keeps it 'running' (although offline) just because decomishioning costs so much.
Supposedly Worcester had a nice nuke pointed at it once upon a time, though i dont remember the specifics, if it was before or after the installation of the reactor, several other low-key as well as high profile (Nortons) manufacturers of military and industrial parts were here at the time, so it might not have been.
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King of Creation wrote:It's actually pretty common, from what I've heard.S4ur0n27 wrote:Schools having nuclear reactors for experiments?
Yes, it is, apparantly. I saw a story about it on 60 Minutes, where the big thing being that there was little to no security and just about anyone could get right up the reactor. It's supposed to be another big terrorist scare thing, but I doubt anything will be done to correct the problem.
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