Details for Mesa Water Boosting Station

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507015822

Data

Marker Number 15822
Atlas Number 5507015822
Marker Title Mesa Water Boosting Station
Index Entry Mesa Water Boosting Station
Address 4901 Fred Wilson Ave.
City El Paso
County El Paso
UTM Zone 13
UTM Easting 364770
UTM Northing 3522081
Subject Codes cities; water topics; engineering; structures; Pueblo Deco (architectural style); city officials
Marker Year 2009
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark Yes
Marker Location El Paso Stormwater Operations, N side Fred Wilson Ave. (Liberty Expressway/Spur 601), E of Marshall Rd. Marker is behind a fence, visible along sidewalk along the N side of Fred Wilson Ave., about 600 feet E of Marshall Rd.
Private Property No
Marker Condition Access Restricted
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In 1903, Charles R. Morehead won the El Paso mayoral race on a platform that promised an acceptable water system for the city. Later that year, the International Water Company (IWC) began construction of a water works on the mesa north of Fort Bliss to tap into the Hueco Bolson Aquifer. Around 1904, IWC replaced the compressor with a new pump plant. This new Mesa Pump Plant drew water from the mesa wells that was then stored in a one-million-gallon, in-ground tank. However, in order to meet demand, IWC pumped water at a rate that exceeded replenishment. The City of El Paso purchased the IWC in 1909 for $927,000, but even under municipal ownership, the pump plant could not meet the demand for water. By the late 1930s, the city had both expanded the municipal water system and revamped existing facilities in order to meet constantly increasing demand. By 1937, the city had both a low-service district system for elevations below 3,850 feet and a high-service district system for elevations above 3,850 feet; the Mesa Pump Plant was included in the high-service system. The City of El Paso Department of Water and Sewage built the Mesa Water Boosting Station in 1938 to replace the aging Mesa Pump Plant. City water department superintendent Ashley Green Classen drew the plans for the facility, which included several tanks, reservoirs, settling basins and other buildings and structures. The boosting station remains the only historic municipal structure in El Paso built in the Pueblo Deco style. The reinforced concrete, one-story, rectangular plan facility features prominent buttresses, stylized tile designs, large casement windows and stucco finishes. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 2009

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Mesa Water Boosting Station
Mesa Water Boosting Station

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