The landscape of water: From Bazalgette to SuDS in the City

Page 24

C A S E S T U DY

Burton Washlands

1. Artist's impression of the core Washlands Vision area.

An Environment Agency case study.

2. Artist's impression of library steps and recreational area overlooking the adjacent Washlands.

© Environment Agency

© Environment Agency

Robert Scott This £28 million project started life as an engineered flood wall and embankment-raising project, to protect 5,500 homes and businesses in the Burton floodplain, Staffordshire, from the ravages of the River Trent. It won the 2018 Landscape Institute Award for Local Landscape Planning; however, the opportunity to enhance the undeveloped floodplain – the Washlands – for people and wildlife followed. This would help to offset the disruption and environmental impacts of the engineering work and, through the provision of flood defences, provide a wider range of facilities and environmental improvements for the local community. It thus generated a broader community base of local support and stakeholder funding for the project. Environment Agency involvement: The Environment Agency developed the business case and an engineering-led project team to improve the ageing flood defences. As the project evolved, the Environment Agency worked with other partners including the client senior user, and professionals in cultural heritage, flood risk, fisheries and biodiversity, to understand the scale of the environmental opportunity. The trigger for starting a landscape-led approach was the development of a brief for a Landscape Vision to cover 630 hectares of floodplain, written in collaboration with East Staffordshire Borough Council (ESBC) and Binnies (formally Black & Veatch), who were awarded the design contract. The brief for the Landscape Vision included: – Aligning with East Staffordshire BC and Staffordshire Wildlife Trust’s Transforming the Trent Valley Landscape Partnership Scheme (TTTV)

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– Improving access, legibility and biodiversity at the urban interface with the Washlands identifying alternative land uses and management regimes, allowing space for water – Leveraging funding via a Natural Capital Register, specifically targeting deprived areas – Promoting interaction with the project to public and partners online and via workshops. These activities led to funding and support from ESBC, Staffordshire Wildlife Trust (heritage lottery bid), Trent Rivers Trust, and The National Forest Company. The Environment Agency set up and chaired the steering group, and funding agencies including the Local Enterprise Partnership have contributed towards the multimillion-pound landscape enhancements. Lessons learned: Landscape architects and environmental professionals in client organisations such as the Environment Agency can provide the stimulus for exciting collaborative projects, by thinking laterally, challenging established engineer-centric project teams and breaking down barriers to communication. A landscape-led approach on this project has generated a breadth of ideas ranging from small-scale enhancements deliverable by volunteer groups, to ambitious proposals and an overarching vision that exceeds partners’ expectations. It provides a visual shopping list of measures that sponsors can invest in, which are delivered through a prioritised programme. Story maps were used as an engaging and accessible way of presenting GIS and technical information to a wide audience and aided cross-disciplinary working.

Robert Scott is Principal Landscape Architect at the Environment Agency.


Articles inside

LI Campus

5min
pages 70-71

30th Anniversary LI Awards

2min
pages 66-67

Manufactured topsoils at the Olympic Park – a review of soil health ten years on

9min
pages 62-65

Tree planting in urban environments for flooding mitigation

7min
pages 58-61

River Cole realignment

4min
pages 55-57

Woodberry Wetlands

9min
pages 52-54

A new Ice Age

6min
pages 49-51

Landscape-led waste water infrastructure

7min
pages 44-47

Tide turners

9min
pages 40-43

Three Waves –the new landscape of Dover Esplanade

6min
pages 37-39

Sustenance in the shadows of the River Buriganga

4min
pages 35-36

Urban raingarden design

7min
pages 31-33

Sidmouth amphitheatre

5min
pages 29-30

Mytholmroyd Flood Alleviation Scheme

5min
pages 27-28

SuDS for Schools

5min
pages 25-26

Burton Washlands

3min
page 24

Steart Coastal Management Project

3min
page 23

The art of natural flood management

7min
pages 20-22

The importance of multidisciplinary design

6min
pages 17-19

SuDS Regulations

8min
pages 14-16

Redirect the flow

8min
pages 10-13

New life for the landscape of the Natural History Museum

5min
pages 6-8
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