News0 min ago
Whaley Bridge Dam
Can a dam like this one made from clay and earth ever be deemed as safe again, along with the wet weather we have, we also seem to get now, much more prolonged hot weather, that in its self can cause the clay to crack, and move / expand. I believe the dam is 188 years old, so who is going to bear the responsibility of claiming its going to be safe, after the repair.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by teacake44. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Ha! Shuttering TC? You know the mantra - "no job too big or too small"
No, it was built well all those years ago. It wouldn't have survived five minutes otherwise.
The maintenance should have concentrated on the top lip of the spillway. That's where water was creeping in and eroding.
I guess they'll pour new concrete in eventually. Either that, or install pre-fabricated sections.
I take Chipper's point. I'm no civil engineer, but I too wondered why overflow isn't directed elsewhere.
Don't forget, this isn't like the Hoover Dam or similar. They are more "vertical". Very thick masses of highly reinforced concrete which hold water through sheer brute force.
If you look at a cross-section of the Whaley Bridge one, it's really just a large riverbank. Although, unfortunately, with a town the other side of it.
No, it was built well all those years ago. It wouldn't have survived five minutes otherwise.
The maintenance should have concentrated on the top lip of the spillway. That's where water was creeping in and eroding.
I guess they'll pour new concrete in eventually. Either that, or install pre-fabricated sections.
I take Chipper's point. I'm no civil engineer, but I too wondered why overflow isn't directed elsewhere.
Don't forget, this isn't like the Hoover Dam or similar. They are more "vertical". Very thick masses of highly reinforced concrete which hold water through sheer brute force.
If you look at a cross-section of the Whaley Bridge one, it's really just a large riverbank. Although, unfortunately, with a town the other side of it.
NJ, I think Corbyn's just suggested the government - he didn't specify which of many - had failed to prepare for possible floods that might arise out of climate change. Proper upkeep of dams certainly ought to be on the agenda, but I have no idea whether those responsible have failed in their duty here. I can't help thinking somebody must have, on the face of it.