| Frankley Reservoir | |
|---|---|
|  | |
|   Frankley Reservoir | |
| Location | Birmingham | 
| Coordinates | 52°25′14″N 1°59′55″W / 52.42069°N 1.99849°W | 
| Type | Drinking water | 
| Primary inflows | Elan aqueduct | 
| Primary outflows | Frankley Water Treatment Works | 
| Act of Parliament | |
| .svg.png.webp) | |
| Long title | An Act for empowering the corporation of the city of Birmingham to obtain a supply of water from the rivers Elan and Claerwen and for other purposes. | 
|---|---|
| Citation | 55 & 56 Vict. c. clxxiii | 
| Dates | |
| Royal assent | 27 June 1892 | 
Frankley Reservoir is a semi-circular reservoir for drinking water in Birmingham, England, operated by Severn Trent Water.[1] Its construction was authorised by the Birmingham Corporation Water Act 1892 (55 & 56 Vict. c. clxxiii) It was built by Birmingham Corporation Water Department to designs by Abram Kellett of Ealing in 1904.[2]
It contains 900,000 cubic metres (200,000,000 imp gal) of water received from the Elan Valley Reservoirs,[2] 117 km (73 mi) away, in Wales, which arrives via the Elan aqueduct, by the power of gravity alone, dropping 52 metres (171 ft) – an average gradient of 1 in 2,300.
Before 1987 it was leaking 540 litres (120 imp gal) per second. In that year ground-penetrating radar was used successfully to isolate the leaks.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ Environment Agency public register of Large Raised Reservoirs, as at 2 November 2020, via Boswarva, Owen. "Large Raised Reservoirs". Retrieved 7 December 2020.
- 1 2 3 "Radar". Penguin Dictionary of Civil Engineering. Penguin Books. p. 347.
External links
