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Ouse Washes – Accelerated Collaboration & Visual Model. The Concept – ‘wire-frame’. Environment & Place. Housing & Jobs. Infrastructure. Business & Skills. Understanding. Information. Data from systems and databases. Names on the Ouse Washes. Great Ouse River. (Old) Bedford River 1636.
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The Concept – ‘wire-frame’ Environment & Place Housing & Jobs Infrastructure Business & Skills Understanding Information Data from systems and databases
Names on the Ouse Washes Great Ouse River (Old) Bedford River 1636 New Bedford River/Hundred Foot Drain 1652 Counter Drain Old Bedford River Old Bedford River River Delph Forty Foot Drain Relief Channel Cut-off Channel
The Bedford river was cut in 1636 to drain the Fens for use as agricultural land
However, flooding continued. A second channel was created, called the New Bedford River (also known as the Hundred Foot Drain) in 1652
In order to store flood water between the Old Bedford River and the New Bedford River, further changes were needed.
Welches Dam was created and the Forty Foot Drain was connected to the Old Bedford River
The counter drain was then connected to create the outside channel to the Ouse Washes.
A new channel was created inside the Ouse Washes. River Delph connects to the South end of the Old Bedford River
Channel Names on the Ouse Washes Forty Foot Drain Old Bedford/River Delph New Bedford River (Hundred Foot Drain) Counter Drain/Old Bedford River
The parallel channels created a huge water storage structure able to capture 900,000m³ of flood water
Fenland has dried shrunk so the Forty Foot drain no longer drains into the Ouse Washes Land shrinking below sea level Land shrinking below sea level
The Ouse Washes Stores flood water from the Great Ouse River Protects river banks downstream to Kings Lynn from being over-topped Defends important agricultural land and properties from flooding throughout the Fens Provides washland grazing pastures and wetland habitats for the benefit of agriculture, nature and wildlife
The Ouse Washes Stores flood water from the Great Ouse River Protects river banks downstream to Kings Lynn from being over-topped Defends important agricultural land and properties from flooding throughout the Fens Provides washland grazing pastures and wetland habitats for the benefit of agriculture, nature and wildlife