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A review of a project which was designed to improve flood prevention in the Bishopbriggs area near Glasgow is to be carried out for Scottish Water. The review will assess the design and construction of a scheme which involved the upsizing of the sewers in the Angus Avenue and Woodfield Avenue area of Bishopbriggs in 2003 and in nearby Mailing Avenue two years later.
The project, which followed serious flooding in the area and many other parts of the Glasgow area in 2002, was designed to help the sewer network cope with heavy rainfall. Scottish Water recently carried out extensive investigative work, including the use of CCTV cameras and monitoring of flows in the sewers, following flooding in the area this July which included internal flooding in 13 properties. The area was also flooded in July of last year.
The project to upsize the sewers, which cost about £2.9m, was designed in accordance with national sewerage design criteria to improve the network following the flooding in 2002. The project was designed by Scottish Water and constructed by Scottish Water Solutions, the joint venture partnership of utility companies and contractors set up by Scottish Water to help transform the country’s water and waste water infrastructure. The consultants will assess the hydraulic design of the scheme and then report their conclusions to Scottish Water.
Mr Jim Hassan, Scottish Water’s regional manager, said:
“We are carrying out this investigative work to establish the reason for the flooding in the Angus Avenue, Woodfield Avenue and Mailing Avenue area of Bishopbriggs.
“Scottish Water sympathises with the customers in the area who have been affected by these flooding incidents and we will do all we can to establish why they happened and to prevent them recurring.
“The consultants will review the work that was done to improve the network in the area five years ago and we look forward to their conclusions with interest."
Scottish Water and East Dunbartonshire Council met recently to discuss the issue and are continuing to liaise. The council is carrying out its own complementary investigations into the cause of flooding from the culverted water course system in the area.
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