The works was built under the auspices of the
South Metropolitan Gas Company's chairman
George Livesey. Before construction could begin many tons of
clinker and heavy rubbish were dumped in order to build up the marshy ground. The gas works eventually occupied most of the east and centre of the peninsula, stretching for around from Blackwall Point, southeast towards
New Charlton and covering some . The works took over the chemical works of Frank Hills at Phoenix Wharf on the east side of the peninsula, which already used
tar and
ammonia from existing gas works. In the 1920s the Government
Fuel Research Station next to the works (on land owned by the company) began research into
coal liquefaction in order to make petroleum. It also performed surveys of the properties of coal, and is believed to have carried out chemical weapons research. This closed in 1958, its work transferring to the
Warren Spring Laboratory. Following
nationalisation of the gas industry in 1949 the plant was taken over by the
South Eastern Gas Board, later passing to
British Gas plc. In the early 1960s oil gasification plant was introduced, greatly increasing capacity. In 1965 the site produced around of gas, the largest in the world for a single site. It was also used frequently in the detective series
Dempsey and Makepeace. ==Decontamination and redevelopment==