A coal bin, coal store or coal bunker is a storage container for coal awaiting use or transportation. This can be either in domestic, commercial or industrial premises, or on a ship or locomotive tender, or at a coal mine or processing plant.
Domestic coal bunkers are associated with the use of coal in open fires or for solid-fuel central heating. Free-standing bunkers were commonly made of wood or concrete and are currently sold in materials including plastic or galvanised metal.[1] Coal bins or bunkers could also form an outhouse[2] or be partly or fully underground.
Coal bins form or formed part of industrial plants,[3] and were found on steam ships.[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Coal bunker". The Fireside Shop. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
- ^ "10-year-old boy locked in coal bunker for a year by parents". Telegraph. 22 April 2012.
All the houses had the old brick built coal bunkers which became redundant when central heating was installed.
- ^ Stracher, Glenn B. (2007). Geology of Coal Fires: Case Studies from Around the World. p. 33. ISBN 9780813741185.
... an undetected fire in a coal bunker at a coal-fired plant ...
- ^ Maltin, Tim (2012). 101 Things You Thought You Knew about the Titanic. eBookIt. ISBN 9781456608040.
... in the coal bunker between no 5 and no 6 boiler rooms.