Otago Daily Times

Historic piece of dam spillway discovered

Reservoir work turns up artefact

- By DAVID LOUGHREY

IT may be showing all the wear and tear of the past 150 years, but a rotting and muddy piece of wood discovered below Dunedin’s Ross Creek reservoir shows one small part of the city’s historic water infrastruc­ture.

The piece of flume, or spillway, from the oldest large dam still in use in New Zealand was discovered as contractor­s worked on a refurbishm­ent of the 1867 facility.

The $6.1 million in work to provide emergency backup water for Dunedin will improve dam safety through the removal of trees and the strengthen­ing of the reservoir bank.

An overflow channel is being upgraded and a pipeline built to pump water out of the reservoir.

Council engineerin­g project manager Janan Nirainjana­n said the flume was installed about the same time as the reservoir was built.

It was later replaced with a concrete spillway.

Contractor­s excavated upstream and downstream of the wooden flume, but did not find any more sections.

The piece had to be removed because of the work, and the council would seek advice on the next steps to remove and preserve the wood, Mr Nirainjana­n said.

The wooden section would be securely wrapped and kept on site for inspection by archaeolog­ists from Opus and Heritage New Zealand.

The dam has a category 1 heritage listing.

david.loughrey@odt.co.nz

 ?? PHOTOS: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Flume exhumed . . . Part of a wooden flume, or spillway, lies below the arm of the digger. Contractor­s are repairing the Ross Creek reservoir dam.
PHOTOS: GERARD O’BRIEN Flume exhumed . . . Part of a wooden flume, or spillway, lies below the arm of the digger. Contractor­s are repairing the Ross Creek reservoir dam.
 ??  ?? Part of the wooden flume.
Part of the wooden flume.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand