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Col. Ward Pumping Station
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A view of the Downtown Buffalo skyline.
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David Stebbins, Byron Brown, Peter Camaratta and Dennis Eisenbach
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Byron Brown, Mayor, City of Buffalo, by a robot inside the Northland Workforce Training Center.
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Dennis Eisenbach, clean energy advocate, inside the Northland Workforce Training Center.
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David Stebbins, vice president, Buffalo Urban Development Corporation
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A view inside the Northland Workforce Training Center.
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Peter Camaratta, president, Buffalo Urban Development Corporation.
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Ryan Disch, senior project manager, Gilbane, outside of the Albright Knox Gundlach expansion site.
Ryan Disch, senior project manager, Gilbane, explains the Albright Knox Gundlach expansion.
A view of the construction site at the Albright Knox Gundlach expansion.
A view of One Seneca Tower
Since smoking was prohibited at the Col Ward Pumping Station because of fear of coal catching fire workers took up chewing tobacco which brought with it it's own problems.
A view inside the Col Ward Pumping Station shows new pumps in front of the old Holly steam pumps.
Six electric pumps in the station are what pushes millions gallons of treated water into Buffalo's water mains.
Models of the two intakes are displayed in the Col Ward Pumping Station.
A view of the bottom of the old Holly steam pumps at the station
A view of the old Holly steam pumps at the station
A panel of control valves formerly used with the old Holly steam pumps.