A series of balancing ponds are being used to create a sustainable drainage solution on the Highways Agency’s £375m 28km dual carriageway extension of the A46 in Nottinghamshire. Fearing that a doubling of the surface area of the Newark to Widmerpool trunk road would create excessive high surface water runoff, principal contractor Balfour Beatty and their consultant engineers, URS Scott Wilson, designed 12 balancing ponds, with the outfall
from each controlled by Hydro International’s Hydro-Brake Flow Cont
      
  
           
                          
                May 3, 2012
              
            
                          
                Read time: 2 mins
              
                    
                
    A series of balancing ponds are being used to create a sustainable drainage solution on the 2309   Highways Agency’s £375m 28km dual carriageway extension of the A46 in Nottinghamshire.
 
Fearing that a doubling of the surface area of the Newark to Widmerpool trunk road would create excessive high surface water runoff, principal contractor1146   Balfour Beatty and their consultant engineers, URS Scott Wilson, designed 12 balancing ponds, with the outfall from each controlled by 1402   HYDRO International’s Hydro-Brake Flow Control devices.
 
 2759   Environment Agency  guidelines require flow restrictions to be held at the predevelopment  rate for greenfield runoff, to channel water volumes into local  watercourses and control water quality. The A46 also lies adjacent to  several environmentally, agriculturally and historically sensitive  locations as well as within the flood plains of the Rivers Trent and  Devon.
 
Designed with a permanently wet sump area, the balancing ponds also feature vegetated dry sections to ensure maximum entrapment of debris and silt at most stages of inflow. The outflow of each pond is fitted with a Hydro-Brake Flow Control or chamber, depending on maximum design flow required, from 27.5 to 66 litres/sec.
 
Work on the A46 upgrade scheme began in 2009, and is due to be completed in summer 2012. It is expected to improve traffic flow and
safety, while by-passing several villages.
      
    Fearing that a doubling of the surface area of the Newark to Widmerpool trunk road would create excessive high surface water runoff, principal contractor
Designed with a permanently wet sump area, the balancing ponds also feature vegetated dry sections to ensure maximum entrapment of debris and silt at most stages of inflow. The outflow of each pond is fitted with a Hydro-Brake Flow Control or chamber, depending on maximum design flow required, from 27.5 to 66 litres/sec.
Work on the A46 upgrade scheme began in 2009, and is due to be completed in summer 2012. It is expected to improve traffic flow and
safety, while by-passing several villages.
    
        
        
        


