Havant Thicket: Detailed plans of how water reservoir embankment will look are unveiled
Planning chiefs are set to decide on specific plans
outlining how the main embankment at the new Havant Thicket
Reservoir will look.
The Havant Thicket Reservoir site, developed by Future
Water, is next to Sir George Staunton Country Park, Middle
Park Way and is planned to come into operation in 2029.
Having received planning permission in 2021, the reservoir
will be able to hold 8.7 billion litres and will span 160
hectares with construction work well underway.
Portsmouth Water and Southern Water said the reservoir is
needed to capture water that flows from Bedhampton Springs
straight out to sea during the winter months as supply
exceeds demand. The environmental mission is to rely less on
rare chalk streams for water, such as the rivers Test and
Itchen, by capturing excess water from springs in winter and
storing it at the reservoir, Portsmouth Water, working with
Southern Water, said.
The site is located to the north of Havant and split across
two local planning authorities, Havant Borough Council and
East Hampshire District Council. The site lies within a
shallow valley between the residential settlements of Leigh
Park and Rowlands Castle. It is predominantly open grassland
with some woodland, hedgerows and ditches which is in the
process of being developed for the new reservoir. The
residential areas of Warren Park and Leigh Park lie to the
west and south-west of the site.
The latest planning application, for reserved matters,
relates to specific details of the main embankment of the
Thicket Reservoir. With outline permission already granted,
planners now have to decide on siting, scale, external
appearance and landscaping.
The design of the main embankment provides a reservoir with
capacity between 8,700 and 9,000 million litres, with a top
water level of 39.5m above ordnance datum (AOD), otherwise
known as above sea level, and a height of 40.5 AOD. The
reservoir’s proposed embankment will be 20 metres high and
2,800 metres in length. The design includes a main
embankment which is 25 metres minimum from the edge of
woodland along the southern boundary of the site, known as
Hammond’s Lands Copse – the embankment slope varying from
1:8 to 1:9.
Some design features include a viewing area along the
western boundary of the main embankment. A staircase of
tiered steps along the alignment of The Avenue will join the
pedestrian access from Staunton Country Park with the
viewing area at the crest.
In and around the embankment plans have already been
approved to create facilities for resident and public use.
This community hub will have; a visitor centre, visitor car
parks for buses and cars, a cafe, picnic and children play
areas, bird-watching hides, and a network around the
reservoir of tracks, bridleways, cycleways and footpaths.
The wetland area will sit on the northern side of the
reservoir for bird watching behind hides and screens along
with public recreational facilities. The visitor car parks
will have capacity for 193 cars, with 70 and 75 overflow car
parking for staff, coach/minibus and disabled drivers.
In October 2023 residents objected to plans for a bridge or
valve tower that is seen as a danger to residents with
children living nearby who might venture out and to dive off
it into the water.
The reserved matters application APP/24/00311 has an
internal target decision date of July 18 to be decided by
Havant Borough Council planners. No public comments have yet
been received.
The News 15th May