Case study:Hampton Court Palace: Difference between revisions

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|Approval status=Approved
   
   
   
 
 
   
      Draft
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{{Location
{{Location
|Location=
|Location=51.4028244018554, -0.340933859348297
   
   
     
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{{Project_overview
{{Project overview
|Status=
|Status=Complete
   
|Themes=Flood risk management, Habitat and biodiversity, Monitoring, Water quality, Urban
   
|Country=England
      Complete
|Main contact forename=Rebecca
|Project web site url=
|Main contact surname=Law
     
|Contact organisation=Thames Landscape Strategy
|Themes=
|Contact organisation url=thames-landscape-strategy.org.uk/what-we-do/projects/
     
|Partner organisations=Thames Landscape Strategy, Thames 21, Historic Royal Palaces
|Country=
|Name of parent multi-site project=Home Park Water Meadows
      England
|Multi-site=No
|Main contact forename=
|Project picture=Hampton court-14.jpg
      Joanna
|Picture description=Hampton Court from the River Thames. (Philip Carey 2010)
|Main contact surname=
|Project summary=Reedbed creation, profiling of river bank, tree management, installation of eel passes and stocking of fish in adjacent ponds at Hampton Court Palace, Home Park Paddocks. Main reasons for enhancement were habitat creation, landscape and aesthetics. Riverbank enhancement, and potential to demonstrate traditional management methods with modern knowledge and technology to show improvement to flood meadow function and water quality.
      Heisse
 
|Main contact id=
The final part of the Home Park project completed using funding from CPAF15/16 was partnership working between Thames Landscape Strategy, Thames21, and Historic Royal Palaces. Three new eel passes were constructed and installed on the Longford River to enable the passage of elvers from the Thames into ponds on site, with urther marginal planting installed on the Long Water Canal.There was the use of Shire Horses, cutting of bankside vegetation and extraction of timber for senestive land mangement practices, and the removal of a number of self-set Norway maple trees from the banks of the Longford River to reduce shading of the river system and to allow marginal vegetation to establish,and restocking crucian carp.
     
 
|Contact organisation=
The project involved local communities and volunteers to help with monitoring the success of the project, and promote awareness of the Maidenhead to Teddington Catchment.
     
|Monitoring surveys and results=Monitoring of nitrates and phosphates and surveying of wildlife on going. To be undertaken by Historic Royal Palace Staff, local conservation groups, volutneers, and local community trained by Thames21.
|Contact organisation url=
|Lessons learn=Project timing is essential to maximize benefit. When to cut vegetation, when to plant, what time is best to carry out re-profiling to limit disturbance,when it is best to work with local communites, schools in particular and those with more fixed schedules, and the fact that projects must be allowed to be flexible enough to alter perimeters should the need arise within these timings.
     
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|Multi-site=
     
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{{Case_study_subcatchment
{{Case study subcatchment
|Subcatchment=
|Subcatchment=Thames (Egham to Teddington)
   
   
   
   
   
   
     
}}
}}
{{Site
{{Site
|Name=
|Name=Home Park
   
|WFD water body code=GB106039023232
   
|WFD water body name=Thames (Egham to Teddington)
     
|Heavily modified water body=No
|WFD water body code=
|Protected species present=No
     
|Invasive species present=No
|WFD (national) typology=
     
|WFD water body name=
     
|Pre-project morphology=
     
|Reference morphology=
     
|Heavily modified water body=
     
|Local site designation=
     
|Site designation=
     
|Protected species present=
     
|Invasive species present=
     
|Species=
     
|Dominant hydrology=
     
|Dominant substrate=
     
|River corridor land use=
     
|Average bankfull channel width category=
     
|Avrg bankfull channel width=
     
|Average bankfull channel depth category=
     
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{{Project_background
{{Project background
|Reach length directly affected=
|Reach length directly affected=25 m
   
|Project started=2009/01/01
   
|Works completed=2016/04/01
      25 m
|Total cost category=50 - 100 k€
|Project started=
|Investigation and design Lead organisation=Historic Royal Palace, Thames Landscape Strategy
      2009/01/01
|Stakeholder engagement Lead organisation=Thames Landscape Strategy, Thames21
|Works started=
|Works and supervision Lead organisation=Thames Landscape Strategy
     
|Post-project management and maintenance Lead organisation=Historic Royal Palaces
|Works completed=
|Monitoring Lead organisation=Thames21
      2010/01/01
|Project completed=
     
|Total cost category=
     
|Total1 cost=
     
|Funding sources=
     
|Investigation and design cost category=
     
|Invst and design cost=
     
|Investigation and design Lead organisation=
     
|Investigation and design Other contact forename=
     
|Investigation and design Other contact surname=
     
|Stakeholder1 engagement cost category=
     
|stk engagement cost=
     
|Stakeholder engagement Lead organisation=
     
|Stakeholder engagement Other contact forename=
     
|Stakeholder engagement Other contact surname=
     
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|Post-project1 management and maintenance cost category=
     
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|Post-project management and maintenance Other contact forename=
     
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{{Motivations
{{Motivations
|Hydromorphological quality elements=
|Specific mitigation=Riparian development
   
|Other motivation=Landscape enhancement
   
     
|Biological quality elements=
     
|Physico-chemical quality elements=
     
|Specific mitigation=
     
|Other motivation=
     
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{{Measures
{{Measures
|Bank and bed modifications measure=
|Bank and bed modifications measure=Bank reprofiling
   
|Floodplain / River corridor=Habitat creation, Reedbed creation
   
|Social measures=Aesthetics
     
|Floodplain / River corridor=
     
|Planform / Channel pattern=
     
|Other technical measure=
     
|Management interventions=
     
|Social measures=
     
|Wider stakeholder / citizen engagement=
     
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{{Hydromorphological_quality_elements_header}}

Latest revision as of 15:33, 6 June 2017

5.00
(one vote)


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Location: 51° 24' 10.17" N, 0° 20' 27.36" W
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Project overview

Edit project overview
Status Complete
Project web site
Themes Flood risk management, Habitat and biodiversity, Monitoring, Water quality, Urban
Country England
Main contact forename Rebecca
Main contact surname Law
Main contact user ID
Contact organisation Thames Landscape Strategy
Contact organisation web site http://thames-landscape-strategy.org.uk/what-we-do/projects/
Partner organisations Thames Landscape Strategy, Thames 21, Historic Royal Palaces
Parent multi-site project

Home Park Water Meadows

This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
No
Hampton Court from the River Thames. (Philip Carey 2010)

Project summary

Edit project overview to modify the project summary.


Reedbed creation, profiling of river bank, tree management, installation of eel passes and stocking of fish in adjacent ponds at Hampton Court Palace, Home Park Paddocks. Main reasons for enhancement were habitat creation, landscape and aesthetics. Riverbank enhancement, and potential to demonstrate traditional management methods with modern knowledge and technology to show improvement to flood meadow function and water quality.

The final part of the Home Park project completed using funding from CPAF15/16 was partnership working between Thames Landscape Strategy, Thames21, and Historic Royal Palaces. Three new eel passes were constructed and installed on the Longford River to enable the passage of elvers from the Thames into ponds on site, with urther marginal planting installed on the Long Water Canal.There was the use of Shire Horses, cutting of bankside vegetation and extraction of timber for senestive land mangement practices, and the removal of a number of self-set Norway maple trees from the banks of the Longford River to reduce shading of the river system and to allow marginal vegetation to establish,and restocking crucian carp.

The project involved local communities and volunteers to help with monitoring the success of the project, and promote awareness of the Maidenhead to Teddington Catchment.

Monitoring surveys and results

Edit project overview to modify the Monitoring survey and results.


Monitoring of nitrates and phosphates and surveying of wildlife on going. To be undertaken by Historic Royal Palace Staff, local conservation groups, volutneers, and local community trained by Thames21.

Lessons learnt

Edit project overview to modify the lessons learnt.


Project timing is essential to maximize benefit. When to cut vegetation, when to plant, what time is best to carry out re-profiling to limit disturbance,when it is best to work with local communites, schools in particular and those with more fixed schedules, and the fact that projects must be allowed to be flexible enough to alter perimeters should the need arise within these timings.


Image gallery


ShowHideAdditionalImage.png


Catchment and subcatchment

Catchment

River basin district Thames
River basin Maidenhead to Sunbury

Subcatchment

River name Thames (Egham to Teddington)
Area category 1000 - 10000 km²
Area (km2)
Maximum altitude category Less than 100 m
Maximum altitude (m) 7171 m <br />0.071 km <br />7,100 cm <br />
Dominant geology Calcareous
Ecoregion Great Britain
Dominant land cover Suburban
Waterbody ID GB106039023232



Other case studies in this subcatchment: Broom Road Recreation Ground, Chertsey meads, Hurst Park, Teddington Wharf, The Barge Walk, Hampton Court


Site

Name Home Park
WFD water body codes GB106039023232
WFD (national) typology
WFD water body name Thames (Egham to Teddington)
Pre-project morphology
Reference morphology
Desired post project morphology
Heavily modified water body No
National/international site designation
Local/regional site designations
Protected species present No
Invasive species present No
Species of interest
Dominant hydrology
Dominant substrate
River corridor land use
Average bankfull channel width category
Average bankfull channel width (m)
Average bankfull channel depth category
Average bankfull channel depth (m)
Mean discharge category
Mean annual discharge (m3/s)
Average channel gradient category
Average channel gradient
Average unit stream power (W/m2)


Project background

Reach length directly affected (m) 25 m0.025 km <br />2,500 cm <br />
Project started 2009/01/01
Works started
Works completed 2016/04/01
Project completed
Total cost category 50 - 100 k€
Total cost (k€)
Benefit to cost ratio
Funding sources

Cost for project phases

Phase cost category cost exact (k€) Lead organisation Contact forename Contact surname
Investigation and design Historic Royal Palace, Thames Landscape Strategy
Stakeholder engagement and communication Thames Landscape Strategy, Thames21
Works and works supervision Thames Landscape Strategy
Post-project management and maintenance Historic Royal Palaces
Monitoring Thames21



Reasons for river restoration

Mitigation of a pressure Riparian development
Hydromorphology
Biology
Physico-chemical
Other reasons for the project Landscape enhancement


Measures

Structural measures
Bank/bed modifications Bank reprofiling
Floodplain / River corridor Habitat creation, Reedbed creation
Planform / Channel pattern
Other
Non-structural measures
Management interventions
Social measures (incl. engagement) Aesthetics
Other


Monitoring

Hydromorphological quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Biological quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Physico-chemical quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative


Monitoring documents



Additional documents and videos


Additional links and references

Link Description

Supplementary Information

Edit Supplementary Information