Illustrations of the Croton Aqueduct
On the south side of the Reservoir a pipe of 3 feet diameter leaves each division and they are arranged with branches so as to draw from one or both divisions. The house standing across the division wall is directly over the mouth of the effluent pipes, and is constructed like those at the Receiving Reservoir, with a gate and screen frame of timber.
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The central pilaster on 40th street has an entrance (like
that on 42nd street) to the vault where the stop-cocks are situated which regulate the discharge from the Reservoir. The pipes leave the Reservoir at the base of this pilaster and from 40th street, curve into the 5th Avenue, which they pursue until they reach a convenient point for diverging to the densely populated parts of the city. This Reservoir is 420 feet square on the top, measuring on the cornice of the main wall ; it is 425 feet square at the top of the cornice of the pilasters, and 436 feet square at the base, measuring from outside to outside of the corner pilasters, covering a little over four acres. The height of the walls is 45 feet above the streets around, and about 50 feet above the foundations. The water is 36 feet deep when it reaches the level designed for its surface (which is 4 feet below the top of the walls) and the surplus, when the Reservoir is full, passes into
a well in the division wall and is conducted by a sewer in