Wash basin, for corner mounting, white ceramic, Southern Railway, c. 1924, ex Selhurst Station. Wash basin, Southern Railway 1924
Wash basin on stand, walnut veneer, ex Great Western Railway, Queen Victoria's royal saloon, 1874. Wash basin on stand 1874
Washbowl, ceramic, by George Jennings, Stangate, London, Pullman, tip-up type with broad gold rim, marked 'LIFT UP' on front and decorated with gold patterns. 6 x 14 in. Ceramic wash bowl, Pullman
Mobile sink unit and items previoulsy stored inside the unit. Used in the NHS Nightingale North West temporary hospital to provide appropriate handwashing facilities for a hospital. NHS Nightingale NW was set up in the Manchester Central Convention Centre in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic to provide additional hospital bed space to reduce strain on permanent NHS hospitals. As a convention centre, and ex-railway station, the building did not have the right plumbing to have a sink on every ward. These mobile sink units contain two water cooler bottles in the base, one full of clean water and one empty. The full, clean bottle provides water to the tap and the dirty water drains from the plug into the empty bottle until the clean bottle is empty and the dirty bottle is full and then they are replaced. This enabled a sink to be installed on each ward to ensure hospital-level hygiene without expensive, disruptive and time-consuming plumbing work. Mobile Wash Basin Unit from NHS Nightingale North West circa 2020