Earlier
this month, the Council, Atkins Realis and Knights Brown were awarded the Bill
Ward Sustainability Award at the Ice Wales Cymru Civil Engineering Awards 2024.
The Civil
Engineering Awards recognise individuals and organisations for innovation,
smart engineering, and sustainability in the industry in Wales.
The uncovering of the Dock Feeder
which has been buried under Churchill Way for the last 70 years is the first
phase of a wider regeneration project, with plans to extend the canal along
Churchill Way to connect to the canal south of Tyndall Street.
This new development could open the
potential to deliver a new urban district including the regeneration of Bridge
Street, David Street, Charles Street, Tredegar Street, Guildford Crescent, and
Barrack Lane.
The Dock Feeder’s primary purpose
is to manage surface water, allowing rainwater to pass-through purpose-built
rain gardens, so the water can be cleaned before eventually passing into the
canal.
The design ensures that 3,500m2
of water can be diverted from the sewer reducing the cost and energy of
treating this water through the sewage pumping station at Cardiff Bay
The re-emergence of the Dock Feeder
also delivers a new water habitat in the city centre, creating a new public
space, outdoor seating, an amphitheatre-style performance area and two foot
bridges to cross the water. Floating water habitats have also been installed,
with recent sightings of an otter taking a rest on the platform before
continuing with their day.
In the 1830's, the dock feeder ran
from the River Taff in Blackweir down to Cardiff Docks to maintain the water
levels in Cardiff's Bute Dock. This allowed the dock to operate 24 hours a day,
even at low tide, servicing a 25-mile-long Glamorganshire Canal from Merthyr
Tydfil to Cardiff to bring steel and iron down to the city.
The Glamorganshire Canal was
covered up between 1948 and 1950 and the Dock Feeder on Churchill Way was
covered over with concrete beams and the carriageway built over the top of it.
Cllr Dan De'Ath, Cabinet Member for
Climate Change, Strategic Planning and Transport said: "I would like to
thank the project team and our contractors for delivering this scheme, which
will act as a catalyst for further investment into this part of the city. The
council has set out our future aspirations for the Canal Quarter and in time,
and through future funding opportunities this vision could transform this part
of the city centre, creating a vibrant new district for residents and visitors
to enjoy.”