Canal Boat — November 2017

(Marcin) #1
canalboat.co.uk Canal Boat November 2017 65

RESTORATION


clearly visible remains of two locks.
Unfortunately, when the new A50 was built
it made no provision for the canal, but
there are options for crossing the road by
making use of a stream or farm bridge.
That completes the through-route, but
misses out the city centre – and a restored
Derby Canal that didn’t serve Derby would
be missing something. So we will return to
where the proposed new aqueduct crosses
the Derwent to look at DSCT’s proposal to
rectify that omission – via what the Trust
has dubbed The Derby Arm.
That isn’t ‘arm’ in the sense of a branch
canal. No, the Arm is the name coined for
a proposed boat lift. Its caisson (tank) will
lift boats bodily from the canal (adjacent
to the new aqueduct over the Derwent)
and lower them into a short new cut built
at a lower level. This will lead to a junction
with the river, which will then form the
route into the city (and which you can
follow today, via the riverside walkway).
Artists’ impressions show the Arm as a
device looking rather like one of those
‘trebuchet’ catapult contraptions that
mediaeval armies used for besieging
cities. It comes with a hefty price tag of
£18m, but DSCT believes the Arm can form
an attraction which would actually be
commercially viable and generate a profit.
Sceptics will look back to a decade or
more ago, when having seen the success
of the Falkirk Wheel in attracting funding
to restore the Scottish Lowland canals,
restoration groups all over the country
were incorporating sometimes fanciful
ideas for boat lifts into their plans –
several of which have since been dropped.

However Chris points to the 650,000 visits
per year to the Falkirk Wheel; to an empty
triangle of land by the Derwent earmarked
for high-standard, high-value regeneration,
adjacent to a suitable site for the boat lift;
to its proximity to the M1, to centres of
population, and to other attractions such
as the velodrome, football ground and
leisure areas – and to the ‘political’ angle in
which a developer pays the cost of building
the Arm as part of a planning agreement.
You’ll be thinking that this isn’t going to
be one of the parts of the project that’s
likely to see physical progress in the next
year or so – but in a more modest way, it
is. Derby City Council is supporting the

establishment of a small trip-boat
operation on a length of the river in the
city, linking up with the historic Silk Mill,
credited with being the world’s first
factory. It’s hoped to start public trips next
year. And having established the idea of
boating on the river, the Trust has got
together with a canoe club to survey the
depth of the length of river heading out
towards the location for the Arm, as a first
step towards making it navigable.
In this journey along the canal, we’ve
seen some very different approaches: the
volunteer-led plans for Sandiacre and
Borrowash, the community approach at
Draycott, the ‘big business’ ideas for the
Derby Arm, and the local authority getting
involved in setting up a trip-boat service.
But all of them aim to turn the recent
political progress into practical work.
Chris believes they will answer people’s
‘But what’s on the ground?’ questions.
As he puts it, “The disbelievers will
become more believing”.

Shardlow

Trent Lock

Derby
Sandiacre

Trent
& Mersey Canal

erD
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Can
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dre
)^ Derby^ Can
al^ (to^ be^ restored)^
River D
erwen

t (^) (un
naviga
ble)
reE
aw
sh
Can
al
River Soar
To Leicester
M1
A50 Possible diversion using
existing culvert under A50
To Burton
and Stoke
Canal blocked
by new A50
Swarkestone
Junction
Shelton Lock
Fullens Lock
Original route
obliterated
Proposed new route into
Derby via River Derwent
Little Eaton Branch
(not planned for restoration)
Proposed new canal
route bypassing Derby
Site for ‘Derby
Arm’ boat lift
Borrowash
Locks
Proposed aqueduct
over River Derwent
To Nottingham
To Langley
Mill
Derwent River Trent
Chellaston Mouth
Wilmorton
Spondon
Draycott Breaston
Toton
Long
Eaton
Sawley
Little Eaton
Impression of the Derby Arm boat lift
Checking depth for tripboats at the Silk Mill
CB

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