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Brook Valley Nelson

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The Brook Valley has been integral to the development of Nelson since the early days of European colonisation. From 1868 it was the site of the Nelson water supply reservoir.  Chromite was mined from the 1850s and the Dun Mountain Railway ran from the chromite mines to the Port from 1862. Coal was mined for a few years at the end of the 19th Century. The Brook Waimarama Sanctuary was opened in 2007 and work continues to turn it into a pest-free "mainland island" nature sanctuary.

Water Works
Brook reservoir. Nelson Provincial Museum. Hargreaves collection. 8470. Click image to enlarge

In September 1865, Crown Land within the watershed of the Brook Stream and its tributaries was reserved for the Nelson Waterworks, which was to include a dam about 13 metres higher in altitude than a reservoir, with a 30 centimetre cast iron pipe down to the reservoir and 18cm pipes to carry water to town.1

The gravel catch above the weir. Brook Valley. Nelson Provincial Museum. F.N. Jones Collection. Click image to enlarge

On April 13, 1868, John Blackett, the Provincial Engineer, reported that the dam was completed and cast iron piping had been laid from the dam to Nelson.2   The opening of the Water Works on 16 April 1868 was a public holiday celebrated with a procession to the reservoir and back to the Government Buildings in Bridge Street.3

It wasn't too long before demand for water began to exceed supply. In 1874, the Provincial Engineer, A.D. Dodson, stated "As the mains are extended year by year the necessity for an increased supply becomes more apparent..... I propose laying a 10 inch (25 cm) main from the dam to the reservoir, which will cost about £1,500."4

Brook reservoir. Nelson Provincial Museum. Kitching Collection: 317420
Click image to enlarge

In 1908, engineers found nearly half of the water inflow was being lost. The work had not being carried out to original design specifications, and inferior, porous concrete had been used. They recommended that leakage would be drastically reduced by a new concrete wall built inside the dam to a maximum height of seven metres. The report also recommended the construction of a second smaller dam further up river to provide increased water supply and pressure to the upper levels of Nelson.5

By March 1909, a weir was constructed 46 metres above the Big Dam at a cost of around £2,000. The weir, which is commonly referred to as the Top Dam, was 22 metres wide and 12 metres high and provided a reservoir of more than 18,000 cubic metres. The Big Dam was re-mortared and re-filled by 1911 at a cost of £2,418.

The Roding River water supply scheme was completed in 1941, with the combined output of the Roding and Brook schemes averaging 15% overcapacity for the water requirements of Nelson, Stoke and Richmond. The Maitai South Branch project was completed in 1963. The Brook Dam was decommissioned in 2000.6

Coal and Chrome Ore

"The whole range of mountains ... is rich in mineral wealth ....How best to use it and get it to the Port from these inaccessible mountains is the problem. Fortunately the matter of carriage has been solved for us by the Dun MountainRailway Company, whose railway...coiling like a snake around the face of almost precipitous mountains, down the sides of which a hundred tons of chrome ore are weekly conveyed by the laws of gravitation to the outskirts of the town."7

The mining of chrome ore (a source of chromium) began in Nelson in the late 1850s and continued intermittently until about the turn of the century. Production peaked in 1862 when 3486 tonnes, valued at £24,719, was exported from Nelson to Lancashire cotton mills.8 Chromium was used in cotton dying, mainly to produce yellow and mauve colours, but the English market collapsed and the Dun Mountain ore became patchy and low grade.  The Dun Mountain Mining Co. Ltd went into liquidation in 1872.9

A stroll to the Brook Reservoir. Nelson Provincial Museum. Hargreaves Collection
Click image to enlarge

Coal was first noted in the Brook Valley as early as 1853.  In 1894, the Brook Street Coal Prospecting Association was established to prospect the east side of the Brook.  About 2.7 tonnes of hard, good quality coal was extracted in that year. Unstable ground and a shortage of capital to develop the mine shafts saw this venture fail.

The Jenkins Hill Prospecting Association was also established in 1894 and found a vertical seam of coal, which reached a thickness of 37.8 metres in places on the west side of the Brook.  The mine eventually produced 1337 tonnes of coal but lack of capital and a fire at the mine eventually saw the mine sold in 1895 and no further coal mining was done.10

The Environment
An aerial shot of Brook Waimarama Sanctuary, looking west. NZ Conservationist.
Click image to enlarge

In 2002, it was announced that a group of Nelson environmentalists hoped to develop the abandoned Brook dam area as a ‘mainland island' nature recovery project. The sanctuary was to be a wildlife corridor to encourage more native birds into Nelson city.11

After an extensive and ongoing pest control campaign, to eradicate both animal and plant pests, The Brook Waimarama Sanctuary opened to the public in 2007, with funding from the Nelson City Council, Tasman District Council and other community and funding bodies.12 A $2.6 million, 14 km fence was designed to enclose the Brook Valley water catchment area and create a sanctuary for birdlife, by keeping out rats, mice, possums and other mammals.13 Construction of the predator fence began in 2013 and it is hoped that the reintroduction of species to the sanctuary area will begin in 2015.14

An extensive network of tracks is also being developed within the sanctuary, to encourage people's enjoyment of the environment. This continues the tradition of the area as a place for all the community to enjoy a challenging tramp in the bush, close to the city.15

2013


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