Elan aqueduct


The Elan aqueduct crosses Wales and the Midlands of England, running eastwards from the Elan Valley Reservoirs in Mid Wales to Birmingham's Frankley Reservoir, carrying drinking water for Birmingham.
It delivers enormous quantities of water by gravity across the mid-Wales countryside, through north Herefordshire, south Shropshire and into the West Midlands through eleven major river valleys. The aqueduct is long, down which the water travels at less than, taking one and a half days to get to Birmingham.

Construction

Work on the first of the route from the Elan Valley was started in June 1896 by Birmingham Corporation Water Department. The aqueduct was built in sections by outside contractors, using three types of construction depending on the nature of the terrain it had to cross. "Cut and cover" was essentially a brick lined channel which was manually dug as a trench, then roofed over and concealed underground. Where the route of the aqueduct encountered high ground above the gradient needed to maintain the downward slope, a certain amount of tunnelling was required, using the same type of channel as above. This totalled around, with the longest single length being just over. The third construction type was the use of either bridged aqueducts or inverted syphons to cross valleys and rivers where the ground level dropped too steeply for the required hydraulic gradient to be maintained. The pipeline was continued at the other side of the valley at the same height as the delivery pipe. With the inverted syphon technique, the water naturally fills the lower section of pipe due to the head of water and flow continues downstream.
The initial scheme opened in 1906 with two pipes. Two more pipes of diameter were added between 1919 and 1961.

Engineer

The engineer for the Elan aqueduct scheme was James Mansergh.

Route

The route is Caban Coch via Elan Valley, Rhayader, Dolau, Knighton, Leintwardine, Downton on the Rock, Ludlow, Knowbury, Cleobury Mortimer, Bewdley and Hagley to Frankley.

Features

The aqueduct and its related features are visible at:
Some crossings over canals and railways have been replaced by buried pipes. The line of the buried aqueduct through woodland is marked by a "exclusion zone" from which trees are removed.