Scar House Reservoir

Scar House Reservoir
Location North Yorkshire
Lake type reservoir
Basin countries United Kingdom
Surface area 70 ha
Max. depth 36.3m (120ft)
Water volume 10,064 tcm (2,200 mio gallons)

Scar House Reservoir is the second of the three reservoirs in Upper Nidderdale, the others being Angram Reservoir and Gouthwaite Reservoir. Between them they attract around 150,00 visitors a year.

Angram and Scar House were built to supply water to the Bradford area of West Yorkshire. Water from here is transferred to Chellow Heights via the Nidd Aqueduct, which is a major engineering achievement as it doesn't involve any pumping.

The dam at Scar House contains over one million tonnes of masonry, it rises to 55 metres above the river and is almost 600 metres long. It was completed in 1936. Dam height is 71 m (233 ft). The reservoir is fed almost exclusively from the Angram dam.

Contents

History

Scar House was the last reservoir to be built in the Nidd Valley and took fifteen years to complete, stone for the reservoir dam was quarried from the quarry on Dead Mans Hill,where steam houses can still be seen.

Scar House was once home to more than 1,250 villagers who lived and worked building the Nidderdale dam in the 1920s. Evidence of the village can be seen on the approach road to the dam, all that remains are the concrete bases. The old Village Hall, was moved to Darley, where it now serves as the local Village Hall.

Facilities

Activities

External links

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Scar_House_Reservoir Scar House Reservoir] at Wikimedia Commons