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Elan Valley Reservoirs - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elan Valley Reservoirs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Separating dam at Caban Coch
Separating dam at Caban Coch

The Elan Valley Reservoirs are a chain of man-made lakes and reservoirs in the Elan Valley in Powys, Mid Wales (also known as the "Welsh Lake District"), using the rivers Elan and Claerwen. The reservoirs are Claerwen, Craig Goch, Pen-y-Gareg, Careg-ddu, and Caban Coch.

The work carried carried out over a hundred years ago to build the Elan Valley dams and reservoirs was only part of the huge undertaking. Almost as impressive was the challenge of delivering the enormous quantities of water by gravity alone, across very hilly country and over many river valleys, to a new reservoir on the outskirts of Birmingham in the West Midlands of England. This involved building a 73 mile long Elan aqueduct down which the water travels at less than 2 miles per hour, taking one and a half days to get to Birmingham.

The Elan aqueduct drops only 52m over a length of 118km - a gradient of 1:2300. It runs from the Elan Valley to Frankley, in Birmingham. There are several signs of the aqueduct between these points, in the form of brick aqueducts, exposed pipelines and red brick valve houses on hillsides [1].

Contents

[edit] Description

There are 4 main dams and reservoirs (constructed 1893-1904 and 1946-1952) with a potential total capacity of nearly 100,000 megalitres[2]. The dams and reservoirs are:

  • Caban Coch with Garreg Ddu. 35,530 megalitre capacity.
  • Pen-y-garreg. 6,055 megalitre capacity.
  • Craig Coch. 9,222 megalitre capacity.
  • Claerwen. 48,300 megalitre capacity.

In addition to the four main dams, there are also three other 'dams' at the site:

  • The Dol y Mynach dam - the masonry foundations and the base of this dam were laid in the Claerwen Valley at the time that the Elan Valley dams were being constructed. It was to be one of a series of three dams which were to hold back the waters of the Afon Claerwen making even more water available to the city of Birmingham in future times. The project was never completed but the base was laid 'in advance' because the water level of the Caban Coch would have submerged the site once the reservoir was full. The project became completely redundant when newer materials and superior engineering led to the construction of the Claerwen dam higher up the valley.
  • The Nant-y-Gro dam - this small dam was constructed in the early stages of the project to supply water to the navvies village at the site; it was most famously used during the Second World War by Sir Barnes Wallis during trials of the explosive charges he intended to use in the 'bouncing' bombs which later targeted the Ruhr dams.
  • The Careg-Ddu dam - although often referred to as a viaduct, the archways of this structure are built on a submerged dam; this hidden dam maintains the level of the reservoir behind it in times of extreme drought, and guarantees water can be extracted at the Foel Tower at sufficient 'height' to enter the gravity driven aqueduct to the Frankley reservoir in Birmingham.
Garreg Ddu submerged dam and Foel Tower.
Garreg Ddu submerged dam and Foel Tower.

[edit] History

The Graig Goch dam overflowing in 2004
The Graig Goch dam overflowing in 2004

The reservoirs were constructed between 1893 and 1904 by the City of Birmingham's Water Department to supply clean water to the Birmingham area, by gravity feed along an aqueduct with a gradient of 1 in 2,300.

Before the construction of the dams, the standard gauge Elan Valley Railway was built to all dam sites from a junction of the Mid Wales Railway, at Rhayader. The railway was also built along the dams themselves at varying heights, on wooden scaffolding supported by concrete parapets. The railway itself went as far as a never completed Dolymynach dam lower down the valley from the Claerwen dam, as it had to be built at the same time as the other dams as the lake would have flooded the construction otherwise, however, it was never needed, and the Claerwen dam used road transport only, being opened in 1952.

The navvies (construction workers) lived in a village of wooden huts, which had a guard to prevent the illegal importing of liquor. This later became the permanent Elan Village (see Elan Valley). When construction of the dams was complete, most of the navvies moved on to the Derwent Valley in Derbyshire.

The scheme was opened by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra on 21 July 1904.

[edit] World War II

They played an important role in World War II when the 35 ft. (11 m) high Nant-y-Gro dam was used by Barnes Wallis to test his idea of detonating explosives against a dam wall in order to breach it. These experiments culminated in the Dambusters breaching of the dams in the Ruhr Valley. The remains of the breached Nant-y-Gro dam can still be seen today in the same state as it was left in 1942. The dam is now partially obscured by trees, but its location is marked by an interpretative plaque. The Derwent Dam was also used by the Dambusters for practice, though it was not breached.

[edit] Aborted expansion scheme

In the 1970s it was proposed that the Craig Goch reservoir should be substantially increased in size with a new and higher down-stream dam together with an upstream dam to contain water that would otherwise have flowed down the Ystwyth valley. The proposals were eventually abandoned in the face of reducing projections for industrial water demand and an increasing awareness of the environmental problems that such an expansion might create.

[edit] The reservoirs today

The reservoirs are now owned by Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water.

A scale model of the reservoir network, in the form of ornamental ponds, is in Cannon Hill Park in Birmingham.

[edit] References

  • (N/A), (1955). City of Birmingham Waterworks: A Short History of the Development of the Undertaking, with a Description of the Existing Works and Sources of Supply. Birmingham: City of Birmingham, Water Committee. (Note: Published July 1954, on the 50 year Jubilee of the Elan Supply Scheme).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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