Haweswater Waterworks: Difference between revisions
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of Manchester Corporation | of Manchester Corporation | ||
1925 Design of the Haweswater scheme started, to supply Manchester with water from Haweswater. The Haweswater dam was the first buttress structure to be built in this country. | |||
1929 Construction was started; the dam has a height of 120ft and consists of forty-four buttresses; the reservoir has a capacity of 18,660 million gallons. As well as the reservoir, an aqueduct with one line of pipes was to built to the Heaton Park reservoir in Manchester. However, the scheme was suspended in the financial crisis of 1931. It was then decided to restrict it by building only about 9 miles of aqueduct, to connect with the existing [[Thirlmere Aqueduct|Thirlmere aqueduct]]; a | |||
new Act of Parliament was thus needed | |||
1934 Work resumed. | |||
1941 The modified scheme was completed in 1941. | |||
Post-WWII Construction of the [[Haweswater Aqueduct|Haweswater aqueduct]] itself was started. | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== |
Revision as of 17:48, 15 February 2022
of Manchester Corporation
1925 Design of the Haweswater scheme started, to supply Manchester with water from Haweswater. The Haweswater dam was the first buttress structure to be built in this country.
1929 Construction was started; the dam has a height of 120ft and consists of forty-four buttresses; the reservoir has a capacity of 18,660 million gallons. As well as the reservoir, an aqueduct with one line of pipes was to built to the Heaton Park reservoir in Manchester. However, the scheme was suspended in the financial crisis of 1931. It was then decided to restrict it by building only about 9 miles of aqueduct, to connect with the existing Thirlmere aqueduct; a new Act of Parliament was thus needed
1934 Work resumed.
1941 The modified scheme was completed in 1941.
Post-WWII Construction of the Haweswater aqueduct itself was started.