New woodlands planned to protect Leeds from flooding threat
Work on the £50m first phase of the scheme is set to be completed next month.
It includes state-of-the-art new flood protection for the city centre, Holbeck and downstream at Woodlesford.
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Hide AdNow council chiefs have released details of phase two further upstream including the Kirkstall corridor and beyond the city boundary as well as additional measures to protect the South Bank.
They include creating new woodland areas by planting hundreds of thousands of tree saplings and constructing flood water stores with control gates.
A new 700-metre long flood defence at Stourton is proposed and the riverbed could be lowered in places improve its capacity and flow.
The report calls for approval to put a business case to the government to invest an initial £3.4m in advanced works including tree planting, vegetation and channel clearance between Rodley and Leeds Rail Station.
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Hide AdLeeds City Council leader Coun Judith Blake, said: “After the devastation caused by the Christmas floods (of 2015) we agreed with the government and other agencies to carry out a comprehensive catchment-wide study which was clearly needed.
“With government funding and working closely with the Environment Agency, Leeds City Council has now concluded that study and these proposals would provide the level of protection needed.”