mrpercysnodgrass
Established Member
In my ongoing battle with Herefordshire planing department to get permission to build a bridge over the brook in my garden I have just one obstacle left. The drainage department want me to commission a 1D and topographical survey to prove my clear span bridge will not cause flooding to my neighbours! It has been estimated these surveys will cost between seven and ten thousand pounds! I am not going to do these surveys, one because I can't afford them and two it is a complete nonsense to suggest a small clear span bridge would raise the flood water by approximately one meter!
My house abuts a road bridge designed by the well known victorian bridge designer George Jack who designed many large and beautiful bridges around the country. The bridge with its large parapet essentially acts as a dam controlling the flow of flood water. Im sure an engineer such as George Jack would have calculated the volume of water the bridge tunnel would displace into the channel that carries the water past my house and eventually into the Lugg, I have managed to obtain a copy of his original design ( with beautiful hand written aesthetic movement script) unfortunately none of his notes survive.
I am a complete dunce when it come to maths, so (eventually) my question is.....can any of you geniuses calculate the volume of water displaced by the tunnel and can the channel take this water without flooding over the channel?
I should explain, there is a short run of channel for approximately eight meters from the bridge (bottom left on the sketch) then a small waterfall, the channel is then slightly larger (bottom right) The attached photo shows the road bridge behind the small existing foot bridge and waterfall.
Any help on this would be gratefully received.
My house abuts a road bridge designed by the well known victorian bridge designer George Jack who designed many large and beautiful bridges around the country. The bridge with its large parapet essentially acts as a dam controlling the flow of flood water. Im sure an engineer such as George Jack would have calculated the volume of water the bridge tunnel would displace into the channel that carries the water past my house and eventually into the Lugg, I have managed to obtain a copy of his original design ( with beautiful hand written aesthetic movement script) unfortunately none of his notes survive.
I am a complete dunce when it come to maths, so (eventually) my question is.....can any of you geniuses calculate the volume of water displaced by the tunnel and can the channel take this water without flooding over the channel?
I should explain, there is a short run of channel for approximately eight meters from the bridge (bottom left on the sketch) then a small waterfall, the channel is then slightly larger (bottom right) The attached photo shows the road bridge behind the small existing foot bridge and waterfall.
Any help on this would be gratefully received.