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Reading on Facebook that it's being evacuated due to the dam wall on Toddbrook collapsing. I know that there are some stwers based that way, so sending some positive vibes your way.
Manchester Evening News are doing Live Updates https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/reservoir-sealed-police-people-told-16681771?
I used to live there, absolutely loved it. Not sure I could cross my fingers any more than they currently are 🙁
Those pictures are a bit scary looking, then you look at where the wall is in relation to the village it gets even scarier!
Looks like its getting worse in that last link. Can't believe some people are refusing to move to a safe place
The breach looks to be spreading quite quickly. I hope they've got everyone out, including the idiots refusing to leave.
From earlier footage it looks like the reservoir overtopped and ran down the spillway as designed, but the surface has washed away in part. It's not the dam breached from inside.
Now the dam has stopped overtopping it shouldn't be so much a risk but heavy rain could wash more away and then concern how much damaged inside. Will be a big tough wall other side though and huge mound of earth still remaining, given victorian engineering so hopefully will hold.
Evacuation is obvious precaution though and to fix it they might have to drain it which means waiting for levels to go down in rivers.
Surely some duct tape is all that's required...
The dam might breach chaps where should we choose for the parking point. 🤦🏻♂️

As deadkenny says... Kinda looks like the bit that's "collapsed" is just some concrete on a spillway with about a billion tons of earth underneath it. I wouldn't describe that as a collapse. Bit worrying, yes, and if I lived downstream, I'd be GingTFO, but seems a bit sensationalist.
Surely some duct tape is all that’s required…
Looks like a sticker to me. 🙂
I'm hoping DeadKenny's assessment is correct. There were certainly a lot of blokes standing around scratching their heads on the bit of the dam most likely to end up in New Mills if it was a proper breach.
The issue is that if the spillway needs to flow due to more heavy rain, etc. then said flow will was away the earth core to the dam. Not something you want to take any risks on - there's been quite a few incidents like this over the past year or so on older dams.
That'll by guess that this is initial damage and it's the further damage they are worried about.
They've closed Union Road in New Mills, presumably because if the dam goes, the Goyt is going to get a massive influx of water and the local bridges are potentially vulnerable.
I know it's stating the obvious, but there has been a colossal amount of rain in the last couple of days and the local rivers are already close to overflowing or over their banks already.
Fingers crossed nothing happens.
Been working over that way today (Higher Disley) and needed to drop property keys off in Chapel en le frith.
Quickest route is straight through Whaley, not a chance!!
All the roads into are shut with Police cordons in place, traffic around the area was crap at 2pm today so god knows what its going to be like at peak times as a lot of people who have been out for the day(myself included) wont have a clue whats going on.
Best bet is avoid it if you can
We've walked over that dam many times and I have thought 'what if'. We're in Marple and if it does go the rivers and canals are going to be properly overflowing.
Hope everyone can stay safe.
As deadkenny says… Kinda looks like the bit that’s “collapsed” is just some concrete on a spillway with about a billion tons of earth underneath it. I wouldn’t describe that as a collapse.
Yeah, cos earth is renowned as being highly resistant to tonnes of water running over it at high speed. The concrete layer on top was just for decoration wasn't it, to make it look nice.
Words fail me.
As Drac said above, huge number of emergency service vehicles parked just where a dam burst is going to wash them away, also if there is another emergency near by whos going to respond, who thought it was a good idea to handball all those sandbags onto the top of the dam havent these mangers ever heard of sack trucks, to transport loads over short distances, and one poor guy stacking bags tied to the railing with a rope. Wheres the army and other armed forces.
Dolgarog in North Wales was the last UK dam collapse in 1925. Some nice rides on a bike round there, and the old wall is still there of the dam.
Fingers crossed the rains hold up until this is sorted as Ive friend who live in Whaley. Just cant help but this premiums on the houses in the bottom of the image might go up a bit this year
If the dam fails then it is the Utility's liability not the standard homeowner property insurance. Most houses affected by this kind of failure are well outside the flood maps. Only a dam burst/failure is probably going to cause this kind of pluvial flooding event.
The concrete spillway is not decoration. It is there to quickly transport the overtopping water away from the reservoir. The absence of concrete on that part of the spillway will exacerbate the situation if they get overtopping again as the scouring effect of the fast moving water will wash away more surface layers. If this happens repeatedly the earth wall dam is at risk.
For those stating that people are "refusing to leave", I have family about 500m from it. The roads are closed and have been for hours - nobody goes in or out. Even the road over Disley tops.
Just to add a bit of someone who actually knows what they're talking about (as opposed to ill informed speculation from people who can't be arsed/are incapable of doing a bit of research before spouting off) this from the Grauniad -
Such earth embankment dams are at serious risk of being quickly washed away if the concrete spillways that protect them are damaged, according to Mohammad Heidarzadeh, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Brunel University London. “In embankment dams, spillways are extremely important, because they prevent embankment dams from overtopping,” he said. “Due to heavy rainfall ine the Whaley Bridge area, the spillway is now broken and a big chunk of its concrete structure is damaged. There is a possibility that the spillway could then become fully broken in a few hours. If the spillway is fully gone, the embankment dam will be washed away very rapidly, which could cause a massive flood.”
So in layman's terms, if the concrete skin goes, the risk is that the water scoops away the earth underneath, thereby compromising the structural integrity of the earth wall. This may already have happened, maybe not. I certainly wouldn't be chancing it. Fingers crossed for all affected
you're just repeating my words with your own vocabulary ... are you my Mum ?
Whoever's responsible for maintaining the dam is in major problem.
The still images and video here..
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.buxtonadvertiser.co.uk/news/video-shows-moment-floodwater-poured-over-toddbrook-reservoir-dam-following-torrential-rain-just-hours-before-whaley-bridge-was-evacuated-1-9911325&ved=2ahUKEwiq1tuOxOLjAhUVu3EKHSHeB6U4ChCjtAEwA3oECAEQCQ&usg=AOvVaw1p0fXBjER-z8Fg6X-QKaqK
Clearly show some sizeable plants growing on the spillway which given their size must have roots which pass completely through the concrete skin of the spillway.
The fact the plants arent being washed away in the video despite the volume of water passing by suggests the roots are sizeable.
Failure of the joints between the seperate concrete slabs allowing the clay earth underneath to be washed away eventually leading to the slabs failling themselves.
Maintenance failure will be pretty hard to talk their way out of.
Latest news from on the scene: the engineers think if it does breach, it will be in the next couple of hours.
Holy Shit Batman !!
Sandbags on a dam wall and pumping out like mad.
A prayer for no more rain is as valid.
This dont look good outcome..
Come on chaps, this is a serious situation that could, in the worst case, literally rip the heart out of a thriving community. Maybe we can keep the internet engineering and willy waving down a bit, eh?
IANACE, but surely the danger is water percolating through the breach in the concrete topping and down the underside of the remaining unbroken concrete
This would have a 2 fold effect. Wetting and loosening the earth bank so in the event of a structual failure it washes away very , very quickly
Increasing pressure on the underside of the remaing sound concrete , by adding mass / density to the earth . If the inceased weight on the underside of the spillway increases then a larger , potentialy catastrophic failure could occur with huge chunks of concrete being dislodged and then a river of wet mud de -stabilising the remaining earth bank
or perhaps not?
Have you forgotten where you are .
This is STW where everyone becomes an instant exprt on absolutely everything despite having zero prior knowledge or having stuudied for and passed exams pertaining to a subject even mildly related to the hot topic of the day
and there are actual real life people on here who are experts in whatever particular feild is up for discussion, who know what they are talking about , and they still get told they are wrong , even if tey are right . because even if you are right, on the interent most things drop down to a difference of opions . .
New Mills is also significantly locked down, they've brought police in from as far afield as Yorkshire and Lancashire to deal with this.
It's nice in the streets though, kids playing on bikes, people bringing tea and coffee to the police.
This is STW
the best place to prove that even broken watches are correct twice a day
😉
Well, watching the BBC News and the reporter says that one theory is that the water is being driven through from the inside out by pressure. You have to think, that if that is the case, it doesn't sound great.
More practically, anyone trying to drive through New Mills from the A6 end of the world can pretty much forget it, though you can get in from the Hayfield side and over the top from Marple Bridge. Anything with a bridge over the Goyt or low lying enough to be threatened by any sort of potential flood surge is shut off by the police.
It was possible to sneak through the Torrs apparently and bypass the police cordon, but some idiot called Crazy Fingers or such like tipped them off and ruined it for everyone. What a nonber, now I can't get to the chippy 🙁
There seems to be a lot of confusion from poor reporting, I have heard the phrase dam has collapsed used etc. When people stop and think about the unfolding scene they provide sensible comment when they react to the emotive headlines then their imagination runs wild. (not aimed at STW posters).
My take (acknowledging previous posts) is that the engineers are concerned that more rain will cause further overflow resulting in hydraulic action on the damaged spill way section. This will undercut the top of the dam causing a collapse. Then the water running though the breech will cause more erosion at an increasing rate. The result will be a tsunami like wave followed by a large river running through the village.
An evacuation had to be carried out, the possible consequences otherwise are unthinkable.
Not having read all the above I'll jump in here as a civil engineer.
Earthfill dams always have a water cut off built in - watertight upstream face, internal clay waterstop etc. Earth on its own won't hold back water, water will move through the pores saturating the whole structure until it fails by a mechanism such as a rotational slump or piping. Think of building dams of sand as a child on the beach - they'd always ultimately fail as the sand became saturated.
In dams of this era the waterstop is nearly always clay. The initial failure has been the concrete of the spillway, but it is particularly interesting to read that a clay layer beneath the spillway has been eroded. I'd be surprised if this clay layer was the main waterstop for the structure, common sense says the less of the structure with saturated pore spaces generally the more stable the earth fill shall be. The clay layer here may have been designed to stop water running down the spillway from saturating the downstream face of the embankment - the joints in the concrete slabbed spillway may not have been waterproof as designed.
In summary if the waterstop is gone piping failure is a very real risk. I think in any case the earth fill embankment is now saturated in this area so that sudden collapse through a slip or slump is a very real risk. This would be a very sudden event.
The water level will need to drop substantially for this risk to reduce.
Regarding the condition of the dam and spillway, the Reservoirs Act means all such structures must be inspected by an qualified engineer, who can force maintenance obligations on the owner. Hence the buck may stop with a Reservoir Panel Engineer rather than the owner, if there is judged to be liability due to poor maintenance.
Disclaimer - others know more!
You should have posted earlier!
Hydraulic action would be involved wouldn't it?
So, to sum up - the earth behind that concrete may already be saturated enough to collapse, and further overflow only increases that risk?
Terrifying. My thoughts are with the people having to work tonight in proximity to the dam or in Whaley with that thing hanging over them.
ElShalimo
Member
you’re just repeating my words with your own vocabulary … are you my Mum ?
I'm your Mum, I wish you'd get out more and meet a nice girl, instead of sitting in your bedroom on that computer.
Panic over - the sand bags are in place. I'm sure they will be able to hold back 1.3 million tonnes of water:

Don't they just help to minimise overflow whilst pumping takes place?
If Joking: LOL
but it is particularly interesting to read that a clay layer beneath the spillway has been eroded. I’d be surprised if this clay layer was the main waterstop for the structure,
I suspect "clay layer" may be a guess by a journalist. As you say there is normally a clay core with other material making up the bulk of the embankment on either face. Not that it matters much what it is if it gets washed away. The spillway failure looks very much like the Oroville Dam failure in the States where water found its way down between the concrete floor and the side retaining wall of the spillway washing out the foundation. I suppose all that can be done now is to continue getting the water level down as quickly as possible to reduce load on the embankment and avoid any further overspill.
Disclaimer - Ex Civil Engineer, designed water retaining structures but never an earth embankment dam.
Its ok , the interent says there is a plug, its low down but there is a plug. Hope its got a long chain on it that reaches the top, I mean surely ...
Loving the guy on the static line secured to the flimsy galvanised footbridge. Yes , when that dam gives way the static line will ensure your safety as the galvy footbridge is mounted onto the dam , which is on a soaking wet mud bank with some modelling clay whacked on the front,
by Irish Navvies in 1820 . Always time for safety whilst placing sandbags on top of a busted dam wall to divert the overtopping to a more stable run off area.
Its ok , the interent says there is a plug, its low down but there is a plug.
Yes I was intrigued by that.
Just found this in New Civil Engineer magazine. Sounds like it is primarily boulder clay construction after all.
The New Civil Engineer piece is good. There's also a good collection of videos and comment in this link. The blogger is a pilot who has provided some of the best coverage of the 737 Max fiasco - he's pretty level headed.
https://twitter.com/ShirebrookFire/status/1157135722307977216?s=19
They had a Chinook up there last night bringing in ballast.
They are currently dropping bags of aggregate into the 'hole' via a Chinook - it's a ruddy big hole looking at some of the pictures on line with the bags already in there.
Been watching the Chinook on the local news this morning. What skill those pilots have dropping the gravel bags down.
We're 6 miles away from the dam. It's been a weird night. For some reasons a lot of house alarms have been going off.
I have friends and customers in Whaley Bridge,its a properly worrying situation for them. Some have businesses that they've taken years to build up.
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Just screen grabbed this from Facebook. What a pilot!
Good update from the actual scene via the people who know. (Derbyshire constabulary)
A further update has been issued this morning regarding the ongoing incident at Toddbrook Reservoir in Whaley Bridge.
Officers have been assisted overnight by a wide number of partner agencies including the fire service who have sent firefighters from across the country, the Environment Agency, the ambulance service, local councils and emergency planning staff.
We were also assisted overnight by RAF crews who used a Chinook helicopter to move more than 50 tonnes of aggregate into the reservoir wall to reinforce it.
This work was done in conjunction with expert structural engineers, who have been advising the emergency response since yesterday afternoon.
Throughout the day, work will continue to further shore up the reservoir wall. The Chinook will also be dropping aggregate into other parts of the reservoir today, to stem the flow of water going into it.
There are also a total of 16 high volume water pumps which have been installed in the reservoir, in order to reduce the water levels. These have been provided by fire services from across the country and the Canal and River Trust.
Assistant Chief Constable Kem Mehmet, said: “Our message today remains the same as there is still a risk the dam will fail, please stay away from the area.
“If you are asked to leave, please heed emergency services and expert advice and do so. We understand that being asked to leave your home is an extremely difficult and worrying situation to find yourself in, however it is not a decision we have taken lightly and ultimately the safety of the public is our main concern.
“The evacuation point at Chapel High School, Long Lane, Chapel-en-le-Frith, High Peak, SK23 0TQ, will remain open today and residents will be accommodated if they are unable to make alternative arrangements.
“We have evacuated more than 1,000 people from the areas that would be immediately affected by floodwater should the wall fail.
“The majority have been able to find accommodation with family and friends. About 40 people have also been put up in a local hotel and they will be looked after today.
“We don’t know how long this operation will take to conclude but we and our colleagues in the emergency services, partner agencies, Environment Agency and military are doing everything humanly possible to save the reservoir wall and to protect the town.”
Let’s hope everything turns out ok like the previous scare of that dam wall (redmires?) in the Peak about 10 years ago
Of course, nothing can compare to the true horror of finding out that Edwina Currie has moved to your town.
Ulley, Houns.
👍🏻
Blimey, was 2007. Interesting read
Best wishes to all and stay safe from an ex New Mills and Furness resident. I understand Furness Vale was evacuated too.
I find it amazing that they can lower the volume using pumps. There must be some serious volumes being shifted.
@franksinatra if they have big 24" pumps there, they can move about 1.4 cumecs.
I find it amazing that they can lower the volume using pumps. There must be some serious volumes being shifted.
Yep. I guess you need a big pipe (or 16) and just enough oomph to prime the pipe to its high point and back down below the water level, then the siphon will do the rest
The Goyt's going to be rather full. I've seen a video from down near Roman Lakes and it's full to the brim already. Might take a look at the Goyt near me this weekend (I'm less than half a mile from it, but on the top of a hill).
@fossy: Goyt levels have dropped considerably from their high point on Tuesday. Which is good because it gives a bit more leeway for pumping a shitload of reservoir water into it.
A couple of my old oppos are involved in the RAF operation to help shore up the dam, one is on the Chinook and one is on the ground supporting them.
Aye, I rode over the Goyt at marple on the way home lasty night and again this morning on the way to work. last night I crossed at chadkirk where the river is already about 60 feet wide - it was up to about 80 feetwide, and a good two or three feet deeper than normal. there's normally an exposed weir there, it was completely submerged.
this morning I crossed at Brabyn's Park, river is much narrower there (it's just above the point where the etherow joins) and it as about 2 feet up on normal, width up from 20 feet to 25. You could see though from the vegetation it has been a good three or four feet higher in the past day
Some amazing shots of the Chinook in the press.
The scary thing for me was not the water over the top of the spillway, but there was a video showing water coming out of the area that has collapsed.
which says to me the breach was round the outside of the concrete structure or through the main dam bank.
wrightyson
Member
Just screen grabbed this from Facebook. What a pilot!
Posted 2 hours ago
I'm pleased to see they found some bigger sand bags.
Chinooks in action on Long Hill
Indeed, just seen an image from slightly above and to the side - of the Chinook dropping aggregate bags.
Penalty for failure: high!
see if link works -

I love Chinooks. What an incredible bit of kit.
Also, note to self - do not attempt to ride over Long Hill today.
Those vids of the chinook are amazing - that is some control of a beast like that! Very impressive
A couple of years ago I'd ridden the Whaley Bridge mtbike loop. After the ride I walked into the local Co-op to gorge on munchies. I reached for the only almond tart left at the bakery section at exactly the same time as Edwina Curry. She grabbed it, I was just a second too slow. I wanted to shout - 'Edwina you have absolutely no idea how hungry I am at this moment in time'. There won't be a next time, I'll wrestle her to the ground, wearing sheep poo smeared riding gear.
Fingers are crossed that there won't be any more rain for the next few days. Although some is forecast for Sunday.
Nice pic in the Grauniad...

One walked the dam area a good few times - and we used to raft on there with work groups.
Scary stuff.
Chinooks in action on Long Hill
I used to love Under Slung Load operations, except in the desert!
Apparently some residents are refusing to leave, prompting others to call them selfish because in the event it does go it puts emergency services at risk to rescue them.
Can't see why the emergency services wouldn't just leave them to make their own arrangements if the worst happened and they chose to stay.
Trying to get my head around this one...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-england-derbyshire-49196445 @1446
Couple go to Stockport for the day, but on return cannot go back home due to the dam. Later in evening, they are let through cordons to rescue their pets. They get their two dogs, but leave their rabbits behind without food.
How the heck does that happen?
How the heck does that happen?
Because panicky or stressed people being told to run in, run out.
Christ, they don't hang about. That's some impressive flying
Second picture down, beneath the "How Dangerous is it?" subtitle - https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-derbyshire-49201467 shows earth to the outside of the spillway wall to have been washed away as well. Possibly due to spillway water eventually undercutting the wall - no way of telling for sure.
One of the videos yesterday which I can't find now shows water at the top of the spillway jumping over the sidewall onto the earth embankment probably scouring the embankment from the top, not under the sidewall.