The Environment Agency has completed a £4 million project to protect more than 170 residential and other properties from the risk of flooding at Airmyn near Goole.

Sheet piles being installed at Airmyn
The Agency has worked to reinforce a major section of embankment on the River Aire, using rock armour and sheet piles to prevent the existing bank from collapse and future erosion.
The work started in Autumn 2022 after the riverbank was found to be eroding in front of existing flood defences at the village of Airmyn. A plan was developed to stabilise the bank to help maintain the current standard of flood protection for residents into the future.
The area has been hit by flooding historically with a tidal surge in 2013, the Boxing Day floods of 2015 and widespread flooding of the Lower Aire washlands in February 2020.
Rock armour in place at Airmyn
As part of the work over 180 sheet piles, each 9.5m long, were installed in the ground to stop any potential collapse of the riverbank. Finally, 6,000 tonnes of rocks have then been placed on the riverbank to prevent future erosion.
Dean Hamblin senior advisor at the Environment Agency said:
“The completion of these repairs at Airmyn mean the defences are now strengthened to continue protecting the local community this winter and beyond.
“These £4 million works will provide more than £20 million economic benefit to the area over the next twenty years, protect 171 residential properties in Airmyn village, along with many more in the surrounding area including Goole.”
Now the main work to protect the bank is complete, the Environment Agency is looking at the potential to enhance the biodiversity in the area and complete further landscape works, such as tree planting, infilling hedgerows and possibly creating some small ponds or wetland areas.
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