HMS Alliance, Restoration in Hampshire, UK | 2012
Protecting a piece of history at the Royal Naval Submarine Museum of Gosport
HMS Alliance was launched in July 1945, from Vickers & Armstrong, Barrowin- Furness. At 282 ft (86 m) long and with a displacement (submerged) of 1,590 tons, she is an A Class (Amphion- Class) Submarine, designed for anti submarine warfare and intelligence in the Far East. She is the only surviving example of the 14 submarines built for service in the Far East during the World War 2.
In 1973 she was decommissioned and became a training vessel. In February 1978 she was transferred to the Royal Navy Submarine Museum at Gosport.
Since then, the submarine was exposed to the sea water. Corrosion to the bow, stern and keel, as well as to the original concrete cradle supports, called for an urgent restoration programme to replace corroded components. Furthermore, Gifford (now Ramboll UK Ltd) designed a scheme to reclaim the land around the submarine to protect it from continued sea water exposure.