The final part of Morpeth’s £27million flood alleviation scheme is complete.

Work to construct Cotting Burn dam was the last piece of work on the multi-million pound joint Environment Agency and Northumberland County Council flood scheme.

Cotting Burn dam has been renamed The Hargreaves Dam in memory of Northumbria Regional Flood and Coastal Committee Chairman Jon Hargreaves, who died in October last year.

The dam works alongside other flood protection measures to reduce flood risk to about 1,000 properties in Morpeth.

To reduce the risk of flooding from the River Wansbeck, in-town defences were completed first, followed by the large upstream storage area at Mitford, which has already operated to protect the community. This year, tree poles were installed into the river near to Lowford Bridge to prevent large debris from reaching the town centre.

The construction of the new dam and storage area, which reduces the risk of flooding from the Cotting Burn, was finished in May and it is now operational.

Separate work by Northumberland County Council to address surface water flooding at several locations in the town is under way and scheduled for completion by March 2018 at a cost of £1m. This is being financed through a Government grant from the Environment Agency and county council funding.

The Environment Agency’s Alan Cadas, Operations Manager in the North East, said: “The Morpeth flood scheme is the biggest in the North East and boasts one of the largest flood storage areas the Environment Agency has ever built.”

Northumberland County Council contributed £12 million, making it one of the first schemes of this scale to be jointly delivered by partners.

Councillor Glen Sanderson, Northumberland County Council’s Cabinet member for Environment and Local Services, said: “This was a great example of agencies working together on a hugely ambitious engineering project and the fact it has already been used more than proves its worth.”