Revo Precinct.
For as long as I remember, my earliest memories of street lighting has been the unique and now very elusive Revo Precinct, otherwise known as the Revo Birmingham, due to being a specially commissioned design for the city. Believed to have been designed by a Birmingham council engineer, the design featured a unique lantern comprising of a enormous 28" diameter canopy mounted atop a bracket not too dissimilar to the Sol-e-tern, an enclosed bowl setup featuring a Prefect bowl, and a column featuring the Birmingham city crest on the door, a single ladder arm, a stepped shoulder into the shaft and a colour combination of a maroon base and old English white shaft and lantern. They were installed in their droves, every side road, every footpath had these signature lanterns. If you saw this combo, you knew you were in the city. 2009 however saw the beginning of the end for these iconic lanterns, as the then newly designed LED lantern, the WRTL Stella, began to be rolled out en masse, wiping them out in their thousands. Today only a tiny percentage of the original numbers exist, I would like to try and save more of these before they're wiped out completely.

After searching around for an example since the day I started collecting, a contact came up trumps with an intact example, however to my surprise, it was a Phosco made Precinct, which completely threw the lineage of these lanterns into question. After piecing together what we knew, it turns out when Revo ceased trading, Phosco bought the design of the lantern and column, and made some small tweaks. Most noticeable, the lamp area isn't centred over the spigot, and the column now omitted the stepped shoulder and later the city crest on the door. Whilst I was over the moon with this lantern, I still wanted a genuine Revo made example.

The example you see here is a Revo example, it was installed in a garage complex, and overall its condition is extremely good considering its about 65 years old, a fitting age for retirement. The lichen growth on the top has protected the fibreglass over the years, meaning when the colour change happened and everything went to poo brown, the canopy wasn't painted, meaning I've been able to positively identify the original colour. Restoration will include a new bowl, any seized screws freed, and a respray back to original colours. Overall, an extremely satisfying end to a search I've been conducting for almost 10 years.

Revo Precinct.

For as long as I remember, my earliest memories of street lighting has been the unique and now very elusive Revo Precinct, otherwise known as the Revo Birmingham, due to being a specially commissioned design for the city. Believed to have been designed by a Birmingham council engineer, the design featured a unique lantern comprising of a enormous 28" diameter canopy mounted atop a bracket not too dissimilar to the Sol-e-tern, an enclosed bowl setup featuring a Prefect bowl, and a column featuring the Birmingham city crest on the door, a single ladder arm, a stepped shoulder into the shaft and a colour combination of a maroon base and old English white shaft and lantern. They were installed in their droves, every side road, every footpath had these signature lanterns. If you saw this combo, you knew you were in the city. 2009 however saw the beginning of the end for these iconic lanterns, as the then newly designed LED lantern, the WRTL Stella, began to be rolled out en masse, wiping them out in their thousands. Today only a tiny percentage of the original numbers exist, I would like to try and save more of these before they're wiped out completely.

After searching around for an example since the day I started collecting, a contact came up trumps with an intact example, however to my surprise, it was a Phosco made Precinct, which completely threw the lineage of these lanterns into question. After piecing together what we knew, it turns out when Revo ceased trading, Phosco bought the design of the lantern and column, and made some small tweaks. Most noticeable, the lamp area isn't centred over the spigot, and the column now omitted the stepped shoulder and later the city crest on the door. Whilst I was over the moon with this lantern, I still wanted a genuine Revo made example.

The example you see here is a Revo example, it was installed in a garage complex, and overall its condition is extremely good considering its about 65 years old, a fitting age for retirement. The lichen growth on the top has protected the fibreglass over the years, meaning when the colour change happened and everything went to poo brown, the canopy wasn't painted, meaning I've been able to positively identify the original colour. Restoration will include a new bowl, any seized screws freed, and a respray back to original colours. Overall, an extremely satisfying end to a search I've been conducting for almost 10 years.

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FrontSideBus   [11 Mar, 2020 at 02:02 PM]
Certainly an interesting design.
AngryHorse   [11 Mar, 2020 at 04:19 PM]
What was the idea of the canopy?, to stop sky glow, or to keep the light out of everyone’s windows?
FrontSideBus   [11 Mar, 2020 at 05:31 PM]
Well the actual light bit is so far down it won’t do much for either tbh.
Dave   [11 Mar, 2020 at 09:28 PM]
The gallery of the light itself comes down level with the canopy, so there is a degree of upwards light protection, but it didn't stop light going to windows.
lampy   [12 Mar, 2020 at 07:11 PM]
i had an original revo one of these i had from Birmingham city councils yard 20 odd years back, they were loads of them in a pile on the floor at the time all scrap, I kept it for years but sold it to another collector as it deemed it too large and heavy to do anything with. the lantern top was cast iron on mine, think they mainly dated form the 1960's the early ones had metal tops not glass fibre
Dave   [12 Mar, 2020 at 08:52 PM]
Yeah these things are properly heavy things like, something I honestly wasn't expecting, its gotta be the heaviest post top I have. The later Phosco ones are cast aluminium, and are far more lighter in comparison.
Slyspark   [13 Mar, 2020 at 12:25 AM]
Very nice! I somehow doubt one of these will ever join my collection....
Olav   [22 Nov, 2021 at 10:06 PM]
Hello Dave. It is a very nice experience when you finally get a “childhood love” for the collection. A very nice success. Please give me an information about the lamp inside.
Dave   [23 Nov, 2021 at 09:00 PM]
Oh definitely, thankfully I have most of the lanterns I remember from days of young, I really haven't got much more left to find now. I believe from factory these were supplied with 125w MBF lamps, an ancient lamp I found down a removed column was branded Stella, hence how I was able to ID the original wattage. Later down the line, they were down rated to 80w MBF, either through energy saving measures, or because thats all they could source. The bowl would originally be completely clear, so light control would have been via a glass 'refractor ring' that would clip in to the reflector above the lamp. These days next to no installed Precincts have said ring, as the rather poor design of the rings meant many of them fractured from the vibration of the column in high winds, and constant heating and cooling of the lamp over its life. Indeed, this example was missing its ring, but thanks to a fellow collector, I managed to source one in the end.
Olav   [24 Nov, 2021 at 02:02 AM]
Thanks for your answer, Dave. On flickr are some interestend photos. Search for: "Revo Precinct".
Ash   [24 Nov, 2021 at 09:19 PM]
Nice lantern, of a quite special extended design. I guess this is also what makes them look more ominous than a minimal lantern (a Prefect) at this age

I have a cast Ally lantern in my collection - Elba PVB7Atip and it is by far the biggest and heaviest one i have, for 2x 250W Merc lamps originally. It is far heavier than anything Fiber, even if i would scale up to its size the next Fiber lantern i have

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