Rivelin Dams
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rivelin Dams are a pair of water storage reservoirs situated in the upper part of the Rivelin Valley, 5 miles (8 km) west of Sheffield in South Yorkshire, England. The dams are owned by Yorkshire Water and provide water to 319,000 people[1] as well as compensation water for the River Rivelin. They are named Upper and Lower and fall just within the eastern boundary of the Peak District.
The Lower reservoir is the larger of the two and has easier public access with a tarmac road giving vehicular access to a small car park at the southern end of the dam wall. Access to the Upper reservoir and the woodland around it is by permit, there is a track with a locked gate which gives access for water board vehicles from the A57 road. The Lower reservoir has a capacity of 175 million imperial gallons (800,000 m3), with a surface area of 12 hectares (30 acres), the dam height is 20 metres (66 feet) and its length is approximately 300 metres (980 feet). The Upper reservoir has a capacity of 48.4 million imperial gallons (220,000 m3), with a surface area of 4 hectares (9.9 acres), the dam height is 12 metres (39 feet) with an approximate length of 220 metres. Both the dam walls are faced with stone pitching in the upstream direction and have grass banking in the downstream direction. In 2005 the dam wall of the Lower reservoir underwent strengthening work undertaken by the firm Hesselberg Hydro who used open stone asphalt to face the upstream embankment.[2]
The two reservoirs are fed by streams which drain the Hallam Moors which lie to the immediate west and stretch up to Stanage Edge. The reservoirs have a catchment area of 765 hectares (1,890 acres) which has an annual average rainfall of 39.5 inches (1,000 millimetres). A former reservoir keeper's house stands at the northern end of the Lower reservoir's dam wall; this is now a private dwelling.[3]

