Swing (Feb-Dec 1951)

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^66 December, 19^1 HISTORY records the spectacular aqueducts built by the Romans to convey water above the ground — in Italy, in France at Nimes, in Germany at Mainz, in Spain at Segovia. Here at home, in Cincinnati, Tom Veatch"'s engineers designed and supervised construction of an eight-foot tunnel two-and-a-half miles long, constructed in rock, 160 feet helow ground level, to carry 150 million gallons of water daily. We herald the Romans as remarkable because they built their aqueducts to avoid the hills and carry water by the force of gravity. Veatch's men on the $15,000,000 Cincinnati project built their water transmission conduit from a treatment plant across the Little Miami River and the flood plain of the Ohio River to a pumping station in town. Then they built two elevated storage tanks as handsome as any Roman temple. With lYz million gallons storage capacity, one of these tanks is probably the largest structure of its type ever constructed. Consider a few diversified projects such as these: Does your company or your community want to develop an adequate and safe water supply? Or make a 70,000 kilowatt turbogenerator installation? Do you need a municipallyowned incinerator to prevent air pollution? Want someone to design and supervise the construction of roads, streets or an air base? Require an accurate appraisal of the street railway system? Of a toll bridge? Of a college, about the size of Oklahoma A & M? Would you have occasion to use a river front interceptor sewer? Or have you need for a trickling filter plant of the fixed nozzle type? If so, Tom Veatch of Kansas City is your man! He and his 42? technical associates in the firm of Black Veatch through 36 years have processed nearly 2100 such commissions — many of which are "repeat engagements." They make studies, investiga Temple of the Sibyl Tivoli, Italy Vcatch-designed Water Storage Tank Cincinnati, Ohio