Building The Barrier
26 July 2010
Work is getting underway on a permanent flood barrier to protect
a water treatment works that serves hundreds of thousands of Severn
Trent Water customers in Gloucestershire, in the event of future
extreme weather.
In 2007, unprecedented flooding swamped the Mythe water
treatment works (WTW) in Tewkesbury, leaving some 350,000 people in
the region without clean water supplies for 17 days.
With climate change likely to make weather patterns more
unpredictable, Costain has been called in by Severn Trent Water to
help safeguard the Mythe plant.
The £5.5million permanent flood barrier project involves the
installation of a combination of above- and below-ground
sheet pile walls, a concrete gravity wall, earth embankments,
drainage ditches and dewatering boreholes.
The work itself is relatively straightforward, but Costain has
to take account of nearby structures. Concerns were raised that
vibrations for the sheet-piling could affect the nearby Grade
II-listed Thomas Telford Bridge and its toll booth.
Local residents were also worried that their homes might be
affected by the vibrations.
"We've done a survey of the area and are monitoring the bridge,"
says Matt Crabtree, Costain's Sector Director for Water
(South).
"We did some trial piling in June very close to the bridge and
measured the vibration, which turned out to be less than that
generated by trucks going past."
The flood defences around the Mythe WTW will vary in height
depending on the vulnerability of various areas of the perimeter.
At their highest they will be 1.5 - 2 metres high, with the
earthworks being landscaped to blend into the surrounding
countryside.
The improved defences are calculated to protect the WTW against
a 1 in 1000-year flooding event.
The project is due to be completed in spring 2011.
Ends