Manton Sewage Works Bridge Over The Chesterfield Canal - Manton, UK
Posted by: dtrebilc
N 53° 18.142 W 001° 05.092
30U E 627619 N 5907616
This single arch bridge is built from pre-cast concrete and carries vehicles to a new sludge treatment facility and is bridge number 45c.
Waymark Code: WM10VV0
Location: East Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/28/2019
Views: 1
"The canal was built to link Chesterfield, Worksop and Retford to the Trent and so gain access to more trade. Local Anston Stone was transported by the canal to the river Trent for the building of the new Houses of Parliament. During the 19th century the canal was a commercial success due to local coal. However, mining caused subsidence in the Norwood Tunnel, severing the top end of the canal.
The Chesterfield Canal runs from the river Trent at West Stockwith to Chesterfield. The Canal is 45.5 miles (73.3 km) long and has 65 locks, but only the section from West Stockwith the eastern end of Norwood Tunnel is currently navigable. This navigable section is 31.6 miles (50.9 km) long and has 46 locks.
At the isolated western end of the canal, five miles and five locks have been restored. The new Staveley Town Basin opened in 2012. There are slipways at Tapton Lock in Chesterfield and Staveley Town Basin. There is also a craning pad at the basin. This leaves nine miles to be restored. There are detailed plans for the entire stretch, prepared by the Chesterfield Canal Partnership."
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An existing sewage works was built in 1976, but major expansion works to install the more environmentally friendly sludge treatment works meant that there would be much greater volumes of traffic visiting the site requiring a new bridge to cope.
The canal at this point was a known water vole habitat and as such the arch was specified both to maintain sight lines along the canal but also to preserve the habitat along the southern edge of the canal.