Case study:Longbridge West: Difference between revisions

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|Contact organisation=PJA
|Contact organisation=PJA
|Contact organisation url=https://pja.co.uk/
|Contact organisation url=https://pja.co.uk/
|Partner organisations=St Modwen Developments Ltd, ACS Ltd, OBriens Ltd & Wakemans
|Multi-site=No
|Multi-site=No
|Project picture=Photo of Progress on River Rea Renaturalisation Works - March 2022
|Project picture=Photo of Progress on River Rea Renaturalisation Works - March 2022

Revision as of 14:34, 17 February 2023

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Project overview

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Status Complete
Project web site
Themes Flood risk management, Habitat and biodiversity, Social benefits, Spatial planning, Water quality, Urban
Country England
Main contact forename Phoebe
Main contact surname Ryding
Main contact user ID User:PhoebeRyding
Contact organisation PJA
Contact organisation web site http://https://pja.co.uk/
Partner organisations St Modwen Developments Ltd, ACS Ltd, OBriens Ltd & Wakemans
Parent multi-site project
This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
No

Project summary

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The River Rea, and Callow Brook tributary, flows through the original site of the MG Rover Factory West Works in Longbridge, Birmingham, in a formerly hard-engineered, canalized and culverted channel. In 2005, following the collapse of MG Rover, St Modwen Developments Ltd. purchased the former factory site with the aim of creating a sustainable place for people to live and work. Core to this aim, was a commitment to the restoration and re-naturalisation of the River Rea and Callow Brook. In 2008, the first factory buildings situated on the former West Works Site were demolished which included daylighting the majority of the River Rea. The watercourse through this area then remained largely un-altered until works progressed in this area of the West Works Site in 2019. A two-phase approach has been undertaken to re-naturalise and restore the River Rea and Callow Brook through the West Works Site. The first phase of the re-naturalisation comprised approximately 200m of the River Rea, which was constructed offline in 2019-2020. In the following two years, the second phase, comprising the remaining 750m of the River Rea (an Environment Agency Main River) and 100m of its tributary, the Callow Brook (an ordinary watercourse), have been restored in a two-stage, green-blue corridor offering biodiversity enhancements, amenity space and online flood mitigation storage. Both phases of work comprised extensive removal of hard-engineered structures lining the existing banks and bed of the watercourses (which included a concrete river bank and bed, sheet piling, bag work, a number of derelict former bridge crossings and brick walls) to enable construction of a two-stage channel with provision of online attenuation storage. These works have also created new public open spaces within the adjacent River Park, with a new pedestrian/cycle crossing and separate vehicular crossing to enable a sustainable green link adjacent to the river. In addition, the online attenuation storage generates a significant reduction in existing flood risk for the downstream areas of Longbridge Town Centre. With regard to ecological enhancement, a gravel bed integrating riffles and pools has been constructed, complimented by a diverse variety of native planting throughout the two-stage channel, with three stilling pools with varying wet-dry nature to provide different habitats for wildlife. Furthermore, Natural Flood Management (NFM) measures have been embedded, with ‘leaky dam’ features to ‘slow the flow’ within the flashy, urban catchment and provide erosion protection.

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Catchment and subcatchment

Catchment

River basin district Humber
River basin Tame Anker and Mease

Subcatchment

River name River Rea from Source to Griffins Brook
Area category 10 - 100 km²
Area (km2)
Maximum altitude category 200 - 500 m
Maximum altitude (m) 299299 m <br />0.299 km <br />29,900 cm <br />
Dominant geology Calcareous
Ecoregion Great Britain
Dominant land cover Suburban
Waterbody ID GB104028042510



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Project background

Reach length directly affected (m) 200200 m <br />0.2 km <br />20,000 cm <br />
Project started 2019
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Reasons for river restoration

Mitigation of a pressure
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Measures

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Monitoring

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