About the project
Vejle Municipality, the local water utility company and a local housing association have joined forces in a climate change adaptation project to prepare some of the eastern district of Vejle for more extreme rainfall in the future.
The climate project consists of five sub-projects to ensure rainwater is effectively channelled into Vejle Fjord rather than into basements and onto roads. The new area will also offer a recreational space for play, ball games and outdoor relaxation.
The first sub-project is the Climate Park: a green 750-square-metre wedge with an open, several-hundred-meter-long water channel. The Climate Park sub-project is part of a larger climate project in the eastern district of Vejle, the aim of which is to channel rainwater runoff along a 3.5-kilometre-long conduit from the higher-lying northern part of the district downhill into the fjord.
The entire water passage can cope with as much water as will fall during an 80-year to 100-year rainfall event, projected to the year 2100.
Fittingly inaugurated during heavy rain
The Climate Park contains a water channel with around 750 metres of open waterway, here and there interrupted by small lakes. A pumping station helps the water travel the last leg of its journey into Vejle Fjord.
The total project takes up 182 hectares and will keep the water away from the buildings of the ØsterBO housing association and from railway tracks and critical infrastructure. The project will achieve this by cutting off and retaining stormwater runoff in the higher-lying areas of Vejle's eastern district.
The water that runs down into the district and onward into Vejle Fjord will be guided through a 3.5-kilometre-long continuous waterway consisting of closed pipes, basins and open water conduits.
The Climate Park is the first completed part of the total project. The park contains an around 750-metre-long, open water channel. The channel consists of a narrow concrete conduit that expands into small lakes along the way.
When the channel fills to the brim, the excess water spills over into a wider green area. In this way the water is guided away from housing blocks and out into the Climate Park, where there is plenty of space for it.At the end of the water channel is a pumping station, which pumps the water from the low-lying area into Vejle Fjord.
The remainder of the large project area lies uphill from the water channel. This area contains retention basins and a large new pipe that leads water directly into Vejle Fjord.
In an area uphill from the water channel, a sports field has been converted to retention basins and an activity park. The landscape has been altered, so that the sports field now consists of three independent basins able to retain a total of 5,300 cubic metres of water.
Uphill from the sports fields is yet another basin that the local water utility company is already using to store rainwater. This basin, called Rom's Hollow, can hold around 2,500 cubic metres of water. The outlet from the basin will be changed so that more water can be led onwards to the sports field.
Even further uphill, in a forested area of the water system, is a natural ravine called Abeburet, the monkey house. Abeburet will be expanded to a capacity enabling it to retain 19,400 cubic metres of water. That's 12,000 cubic meters more than today.
Closed pipes will be established as well as an entirely new drainpipe to the fjord to direct some of the rainwater around the area and directly into the fjord.
The total project has an expected average lifetime of 63 years and can cope with as much water as will fall during an 80-year to 100-year rainfall event, projected to the year 2100.
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