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Burnhope Reservoir

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Location
  
County Durham, England

Max. depth
  
40 m (130 ft)

Catchment area
  
43 km²

Managing agency
  
Type
  
Surface elevation
  
398 m (1,306 ft) asl

Catchment area
  
43 km²

Burnhope Reservoir httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Water volume
  
6.4 million cubic metres (5,200 acre·ft)

Similar
  
Burnhope Seat, Tunstall Reservoir, Waskerley Reservoir, Balderhead Reservoir, Grassholme Reservoir

Burnhope Reservoir (/ˈbʊnəp/ BUUN-əp) is a reservoir above the village of Wearhead, County Durham.

Map of Burnhope Reservoir, Bishop Auckland, UK

The reservoir was created by the construction of an earth embankment dam across the valley of Burnhope Burn, a tributary of the River Wear, 1 km above Wearhead. Construction of the dam began in 1931 and was completed in 1937; an extensive network of narrow gauge railways, the Burnhope Reservoir railway, was used during the construction of the dam. Filling of the reservoir commenced in 1936 and resulted in the drowning of the former village of Burnhope.

Burnhope Reservoir was a joint project of the Durham County Water Board and the Sunderland and South Shields Water Company. It is now owned and operated by Northumbrian Water. The reservoir supplies water to the Wear Valley treatment works at Wearhead and there is a pipeline connection to Waskerley Reservoir, which supplies Honey Hill water treatment works. The reservoir serves as the source to meet regulated discharges into the River Wear and to compensate for abstraction of water at Chester-le-Street further downstream.

References

Burnhope Reservoir Wikipedia


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