Paull's £5m flood defences complete
- Published
A £5.2m tidal defence scheme, which includes a glass-panelled flood wall said to be the longest of its kind in Britain, has been completed near Hull.
Paull, on the north bank of the Humber estuary, has been protected by the wall, a raised embankment and 2,700 tonnes of rock armour.
The four-year project has raised tidal defences to 22ft (6.8m) above sea level, said East Riding Council.
It has reduced the risk of flooding to about 1,500 properties, it added.
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The 1,700ft (520m) glass wall along Paull's embankment was completed in 2016. It is the UK's longest glass tidal defence structure, said the council.
The village, east of Hull, suffered widespread flooding in 2013 when a tidal surge, combined with high spring tides, resulted in record water levels.
The full defences cover the length of the village and are designed to provide protection against a one-in-200-year storm event, said the council.
Construction of a £42m scheme to replace or upgrade more than four miles (6.5km) of flood defences between Paull and Hessle, west of Hull, is to start later this year, according to the Environment Agency.
Inland work is also due to reduce the flood risk to properties in Hedon, Thorngumbald, Preston, Bilton and East Hull over the next five years, the council said.
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