Big Ben stops chiming until 2021

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Big Ben's famous chimes will fall silent from next week until 2021 to allow essential repair works to take place.

The bongs will sound for the final time at midday on Monday before being disconnected to allow the clock and surrounding tower to be restored.

The Great Bell has sounded on the hour for 157 years.

Big Ben's bongs to fall silent until 2021 for repairs


14 August 2017
BBC News



Big Ben's famous chimes will fall silent from next week until 2021 to allow essential repair works to take place.

The bongs will sound for the final time at midday on Monday before being disconnected to allow the clock and surrounding tower to be restored.

The Great Bell has sounded on the hour for 157 years.

It last fell silent in 2007 and, before that, for major refurbishments between 1983 and 1985.

Parliamentary authorities said stopping Big Ben - the commonly used name for the Palace of Westminster's Elizabeth Tower - would protect workers carrying out the repairs.

It will still sound for important events including New Year's Eve and Remembrance Sunday.

The clock's keeper, Steve Jaggs, said Big Ben falling silent was a "significant milestone" in the project to restore the tower.

"This essential programme of works will safeguard the clock on a long term basis, as well as protecting and preserving its home - the Elizabeth Tower," he added.

The landmark Elizabeth Tower is said to be the most photographed building in the UK.

Scaffolding is up and repair work has already started.


The Elizabeth Tower, which houses the bell known as Big Ben, is one of the UK's great cultural icons

The project's principal architect Adam Watrobski told the BBC the works would install new amenities in the tower, including a lift, toilet and kitchen.

Essential maintenance will also be carried out and the building will be made more energy efficient.

As well as conservation work to the tower, the Great Clock will be dismantled piece-by-piece and its four dials will be cleaned and repaired.

The Ayrton Light, which shines when Parliament is sitting, will also be renovated.

During the repair work, an electric motor will drive the clock hands until the main mechanism has been restored, so it will continue to tell the time.

However, the faces will need to be temporarily covered while the clock is undergoing maintenance.

The wider Parliamentary estate is also in need of repair, and a multi billion-pound programme involving MPs temporarily relocating has been put forward.

Meanwhile BBC Radio 4, which broadcasts the chimes of Big Ben live, has announced it will broadcast a recording when the bells fall silent.

Head of station management Denis Nowlan told the Today programme that various alternatives were considered, including the bells of Nottingham Council House.

"We came very close to using the sound of Nottingham's bells," he said.

However, a spokesperson confirmed: "After considering various options, we've decided that pre-recording Big Ben's chimes offers the most reliable and resilient option whilst the Palace of Westminster carries out its repairs."

Big Ben basics



The Great Bell forms part of the Great Clock in the Elizabeth Tower - commonly known as Big Ben

It was completed in 1859

It weighs 13.5 tons and the Elizabeth Tower stands 315ft tall

Every hour it strikes an E note, and every 15 minutes four "quarter bells" chime

To stop the chimes, the striking hammers will be locked until 2021


Big Ben's bongs to fall silent until 2021 for repairs - BBC News

Big Ben's Ayrton Light to be switched off

BBC News
19 May 2017



A lamp at the top of Elizabeth Tower - which is switched on in the evening whenever Parliament is sitting - is to stop shining for the first time in more than 70 years.

The Ayrton Light, located above the Great Bell - known as Big Ben - needs to be fully dismantled and restored. A temporary light will replace it.

Installed in 1885, it was previously turned off only during both world wars.

Big Ben will not chime regularly until 2021 because of repairs to the tower.

The light is said to have been installed at the request of Queen Victoria, so that she could see from Buckingham Palace when members of either the Commons or the Lords were sitting after dark.

It is named after Acton Smee Ayrton, a Liberal politician who was First Commissioner of Works between 1869 and 1873.

It is not yet known when the light will switch off, or how long it will be off for.

Big Ben will not be heard from midday on Monday. The House of Commons has said it will look again at the length of time it will be silenced after "concerns".

Parliament said it had to protect workers carrying out the renovations.

But Prime Minister Theresa May said "it can't be right" that the bell will not chime regularly again for four years.

It will still sound for important events including New Year's Eve and Remembrance Sunday.

Big Ben's Ayrton Light to be switched off - BBC News
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Why don't they do the "Milli Vanilli" thing and play a virtual "bong" until the real one if fixed?
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Why don't they do the "Milli Vanilli" thing and play a virtual "bong" until the real one if fixed?

I don't think the bongs should be stopped at all. It's 'Elf 'n' Safety gone mad. Even the Blitz didn't silence them, yet here the mandarins - armed with their 1ft thick EU Rules and Regulations books - are stopping them in case they hurt workmen's ears. Have they never heard of ear defenders?
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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I don't think the bongs should be stopped at all. It's 'Elf 'n' Safety gone mad. Even the Blitz didn't silence them, yet here the mandarins - armed with their thigh EU Rules and Regulations books - are stopping them in case they hurt workmen's ears. Have they never heard of ear defenders?

Are none of them hunchbacks?
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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Damn, they will have to bring their own bongs...

LOL
I guess a ww2 bomb and a bell bong seem similar to some who like to be un elected control freaks.

They need the other kind of bong...
:)
badly



That stupid clock got me up for EVERY day of work in my life
I'll break it out of its storage and wind it up, and turn it up loud to help break up the silence....
 
Last edited:

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Looks like my little rant has maybe got the authorities to change their little minds:



Parliamentary authorities have performed a dramatic u-turn over the decision to silence Big Ben for four years following an intervention from the prime minister.

After coming under intense pressure, officials announced that the plan for Big Ben to remain silent until 2021 is now under review.

Theresa May joined a growing chorus of fellow MPs by insisting it was wrong that the famous bongs of Big Ben would not be heard for the next four years.

Mrs May urged John Bercow, the Speaker, to find a way to ensure Big Ben continues to ring out during a £29 million renovation of the Elizabeth Tower.

Under health and safety rules, the 13-ton bell is being taken out of action to protect the hearing of construction workers on site.

Mrs May said: “Of course we want to ensure people’s safety at work but it can’t be right for Big Ben to be silent for four years.

“And I hope that the Speaker, as the chairman of the House of Commons commission, will look into this urgently so that we can ensure that we can continue to hear Big Ben through those four years.”

Parliamentary authorities reacted to the growing criticism by announcing a review.

In a statement, a House of Commons spokesman said: “When Parliament returns, in light of concerns expressed by a number of MPs, the House of Commons Commission will consider the length of time that the bells will fall silent.

“Of course, any discussion will focus on undertaking the work efficiently, protecting the health and safety of those involved, and seeking to ensure resumption of normal service as soon as is practicable given those requirements.”

The Commission rubber-stamped the building work after it was approved by three separate parliamentary bodies in the autumn of 2015.

Bong! U-turn on Big Ben after Theresa May blasts plan to silence bell for four years