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St Germans Pumping
Station Replacement |
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Interim Client & Outline Design Award
Project Team: Middle Level Commissioners (client),
WS Atkins Consultants (designer), Costain , KSB , Birse
Water (contractors)
The Project
The St Germans Pumping Station near the village of
Wiggenhall St Germans in Norfolk drains some 700km2
of Fens land, whilst protecting more than 25,000 properties
and extensive areas of high-grade agricultural land
to the south-west of Kings Lynn. The existing installation
serves the whole of the Middle Level System, transferring
all drainage to near the village, where the flows are
pumped into the tidal River Great Ouse.
However, at 74 years old, the station is approaching
the end of its useful life and will soon no longer meet
the required standard of protection. Following Defra
funding approval for the estimated £38 million
cost, work has now commenced on the construction of
the new state-of-the-art pumping station.
Feasibility Study and EIA
Atkins Ltd has been working with the Middle Level Commissioners
on the St Germans scheme since 2003 in three phases.
The first, a feasibility study, involved an extensive
option study and environmental impact assessment, culminating
in the successful Defra application. The second phase
consisted of detailed design, prequalification, planning
and phased tendering (three distinct contracts). This
took 18 months, with the third phase of site implementation
works, expected to take approximately three years.
The EIA involved environmental surveys and a number
of rounds of consultation with statutory and other interested
parties. The output of the EIA formed a significant
element in the derivation of the preferred option. Key
features of the EIA were the traffic management plan,
assessment and mitigation of any visual amenity disturbance,
the introduction of mitigative ecological habitat and
the assessment of construction noise on the surrounding
environment.
Once complete, this new, modern station will ensure
the sustainability of the Middle Level System for the
long-term future and provide security from flooding
for the large areas of high-grade agricultural land,
numerous communities and businesses as well as a number
of environmentally sensitive areas
Civil enabling works
The site implementation can be broken down into civil
enabling works, construction of the new pumping station
and the demolition of the existing station.
The first part of the civil enabling works, by the
contractor Costain Ltd, was the installation of a 1.7-km-long,
stone-surfaced access road, running from High Road at
Tilney cum Islington down to the main works area. This
was completed in January 2007 and will ensure that site
traffic is routed away from the local community.
The second part required the installation of a twin-walled,
steel-sheet-piled cofferdam out into the tidal section
of the Middle Level Drain. In addition to the cofferdam,
the existing drainage channel was diverted around the
works on the eastern bank of the channel to enable the
continuing operation of the existing station.
Construction
Installation of the cofferdam enables Phase 2 of the
site works – construction of the new station –
to be erected in a dry environment. Continuous Flight
Augured piles provide the platform from which to build
the superstructure, which will house six concrete volute
pumps capable of pumping 100 cubic metres of water per
second.
In the later stages, the pumps and mechanical and electrical
equipment will be installed by contractors KSB and Birse
Water, with connection to a new electricity substation
constructed for the station. Each pump is variable speed
and has a dedicated 11-metre-long motor control centre,
transformer and 1700-kVA stand-by generator.
The station will be commissioned on line, downstream
from the existing station, using a sophisticated method
to simulate operational conditions, which requires close
cooperation of all three contractors, designers and
the client.Completion of the fully operational pumping
station will enable the final phase, demolition of the
historic pumping station, to commence. The demolition
will be carried out in two halves within another cofferdam,
with completion due at the start of 2010.
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