Interior view of a laboratory referred to as the 'Wind Draught' laboratory at the National Physical Laboratory. This is possibly an early version of a wind tunnel, a large machine for testing the aerodynamics of a design, for instance an aeroplane.

Date:
1 Jul 1917 - 31 Aug 1917
Location:
National Physical Laboratory, Wind Draught Laboratory, Teddington, Richmond Upon Thames, Greater London Authority
Reference:
BL23914
Type:
Photograph (Negative)
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Description

This photograph was commissioned by the architectural and building periodical 'The Builder'. In the early twentieth century, the National Physical Laboratory was situated near Bushy Park in Teddington and occupied buildings at and the north of Bushy House. It later expanded to occupy the present much larger site about 500 metres to the north-west. The NPL was formed as part of the Royal Society's National Standards Laboratory and it was the first government-funded laboratory in Britain, formed to carry out research into physics and to test materials and scientific instruments. The NPL continues to be at the forefront of physics research in Britain.

The exact location of the 'Wind Draught' Testing Lab here pictured is presently unclear, but it is likely to have been in the area to the immediate north of Bushy House or Bushy Park.

Content

This is part of the Series: HBL01/01 Series Of Photographic Negatives And Prints; within the Collection: HBL01 The Bedford Lemere Collection

Rights

Source: Historic England Archive

People & Organisations

Photographer: Boucher, Adolphe Augustus: Bedford Lemere And Company

Keywords

Early 20th Century Laboratory, Science And Technology