Godley Reservoir Explained

Godley Reservoir
Coords:53.4548°N -2.0534°W
Outflow:Audenshaw Service Reservoirs, 30" trunk water main.
Pushpin Map:Greater Manchester
Basin Countries:United Kingdom
Area:15acres
Depth:21feet
Volume:280 million litres (62 million gallons)
Elevation:478feet

The Godley Reservoir is a reservoir in Godley, Hyde, Greater Manchester. It was completed in 1851, as a critical part of the Longdendale Chain project that brings fresh water to Manchester.

The Manchester Corporation Waterworks Act 1847 (10 & 11 Vict. c. cciii) gave permission for the construction of the Woodhead, Hollingworth and Arnfield reservoirs, and the construction of a masonry aqueduct to convey drinking water from Arnfield and Hollingworth to a service reservoir at Godley.

Water was captured from the River Etherow and stored in the great reservoirs and then flowed through the six-foot bore Mottram Tunnel to Godley. At Godley the water was filtered by passing it through straining frames made of oak and fine wires. It was chlorinated to remove bacteria and then entered Manchester's water distribution network. This method was successfully used until the early 1960s, when additional treatment works were built at Arnfield and Godley.[1]

In 2016 United Utilities completed the construction of a 3 MW 45500sqm floating solar farm, the second and largest of its type in the UK, on the reservoir.[2] [3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Quayle, Tom. Manchester's water: The reservoirs in the hills. Tempus Publishing. 2006. 8,24,25,119. 0-7524-3198-6.
  2. News: Work starts on £3.5m floating solar farm at Godley Reservoir in Hyde . Paul . Britton . Manchester Evening News . 27 October 2015 . 28 October 2015.
  3. Web site: UK solar's first steps on the water. Solar Power Portal. 30 March 2016.