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Cardiff Barrage

Cardiff Bay Barrage
Lock gates
Lock gates
Official name Cardiff Bay Barrage
Country United Kingdom
Location Cardiff, Wales
Coordinates 51°26′53″N 3°09′53″W / 51.44812°N 3.1647°W / 51.44812; -3.1647Coordinates: 51°26′53″N 3°09′53″W / 51.44812°N 3.1647°W / 51.44812; -3.1647
Status Operational
Construction began 1994 (1994)
Opening date 2001 (2001)
Construction cost £120m
Owner(s) Welsh Government
Operator(s) Cardiff Harbour Authority
Dam and spillways
Type of dam Barrage
Impounds Cardiff Bay
Height 7.96 m (26.1 ft)
Length 1.1 km (0.68 mi)
Spillways 5
Spillway type Controlled
Spillway capacity 2,250 m3/s (79,000 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
Creates Cardiff Bay
Surface area 200 hectares (490 acres)
Normal elevation 4.5 m (15 ft) OD

Cardiff Bay Barrage lies across the mouth of Cardiff Bay, Wales between Queen Alexandra Dock and Penarth Head. It was one of the largest civil engineering projects in Europe during construction in the 1990s.

The origin of the scheme dates back to a visit by the Secretary of State for Wales Nicholas Edwards Conservative MP for Pembrokeshire to the largely-derelict Cardiff docklands in the early 1980s. An avid opera enthusiast, Edwards envisaged a scheme to revitalise the area incorporating new homes, shops, restaurants and, as a centrepiece, an opera house at the waterside. However the tidal nature of Cardiff Bay, exposing extensive mudflats save for two hours either side of high water, was seen as aesthetically unappealing.

Edwards credited the solution to this perceived problem to a Welsh Office civil servant, Freddie Watson. Watson proposed building a barrage stretching across the mouth of Cardiff Bay from Cardiff Docks to Penarth, which would impound freshwater from the rivers Ely and Taff to create a large freshwater lake, thus providing permanent high water. By making the area more appealing, investment was to be attracted to the docklands.

The barrage was consequently seen as central to the regeneration project. In 1987, prior to approval of the construction of the barrage, the Cardiff Bay Development Corporation was established to proceed with redeveloping the docklands, a sixth of the entire area of the city of Cardiff.

In November 1999, the barrage was completed, with the sluice gates closed at high water, to retain the seawater from the Bristol Channel within the 500 ac bay.

At first major water quality problems ensued which required the bay to be drained dry overnight and refilled each day.

Eventually, oxygenation systems (based on those used at the Swansea Barrage) were installed which improved water quality and allowed the composition of the bay to become entirely freshwater, the only saltwater ingress being that from the three locks providing access to and from the sea for the proliferating number of boats using Cardiff Bay.


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