At a number of places having severe winters, filters are vaulted over as a protection from cold, and in the most important of these, Berlin, Warsaw, and St. Petersburg, the areas of the single beds are nearly the same, namely, from 0.52 to 0.59 acre. The works with open filters at London (seven companies), Amsterdam, and Breslau have filter-beds from 0.82 to 1.50 acres each. Liverpool and Hamburg alone use filters with somewhat larger areas. Large numbers of works with both covered and open filters have much smaller beds than these sizes, but generally this is to avoid too small a number of divisions in a small total area, although such works have sometimes been extended with the growth of the cities until they now have a considerable number of very small basins.

FORM OF FILTER-BEDS.

The form and construction of the filter-beds depend upon local conditions, the foundations, and building materials available, the principles governing these points being in general the same as for the construction of ordinary reservoirs. The bottoms require to be made water-tight, either by a thin layer of concrete or by a pavement upon a puddle layer. For the sides either masonry walls or embankments are used, the former saving space, but being in general more expensive in construction. Embankments must, of course, be substantially paved near the water-line to withstand the action of ice, and must not be injured by rapid fluctuations in the water-levels in the filters.

Failure to make the bottoms water-tight has perhaps caused more annoyance than any other single point. With a leaky bottom there is either a loss of water when the water in the filters is higher than the ground-water, or under reverse conditions, the ground-water comes in and mixes with the filtered water, and the latter is rarely improved and may be seriously damaged by the admixture. And with very bad conditions water may pass from one filter to another, with the differences in pressure always existing in neighboring filters, with most unsatisfactory results.

COVERS FOR FILTERS.

The filters in England and Holland are built open, without protection from the weather. In Germany the filters first built were also open, but in the colder climates more or less difficulty was experienced in keeping the filters in operation in cold weather. An addition to the Berlin filters, built in 1874, was covered with masonry vaulting, over which several feet of earth were placed, affording a complete protection against frost. The filters at Magdeburg built two years later were covered in the same way, and since that time covered filters have been built at perhaps a dozen different places.

Interior View of Covered Filter, Ashland, Wis.
When in use the water rises nearly to the springing line of the arches.

Covered Filter in Course of Construction, showing Wooden Centers for Masonry Vaulting, Somersworth, N. H.