West Baldwin Reservoir (or Injebreck Reservoir, locally) is a reservoir on the Isle of Man, about 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Douglas which it supplies. It was constructed by building a dam across a valley, and flooding the valley. Remains of a village in the valley can still be seen when the reservoir level is low. It is operated by the Isle of Man Water Authority.
West Baldwin Reservoir | |
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Coordinates | 54°13′10″N 4°31′00″W / 54.21944°N 4.51667°W |
Type | Reservoir |
Catchment area | 5.55 square kilometres (1,370 acres) |
Basin countries | Isle of Man |
Surface area | 16.8 hectares (42 acres) |
Max. depth | 21.6 m (71 ft) |
Water volume | 1,364,000 m3 (1,106 acre⋅ft) |
History
editConstruction of the dam started in 1900 by the Douglas Corporation Water Works Department. A railway was first built, including nine wooden bridges over the River Glen, to transport the required material to site. The construction was finished in 1904.
Dam
editThe reservoir's dam was completed in 1904. It is an earth fill embankment dam, 22.5 metres (74 ft) high, which required some 500,000 long tons (510,000 t) of earth to build. There is a vertical puddle clay core supported by zoned earth fill shoulders. The higher part of the upstream shoulder is faced in dry rubble pitching about 60 centimetres (2 ft) thick. The crest and downstream shoulder are grassed.[1]
Use
editThe reservoir supplies Douglas, Onchan and the south of the island. Water can also be pumped from the Sulby Reservoir.
References
editExternal links
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