Nidd Aqueduct
| Nidd Aqueduct | |
|---|---|
| Aqueduct carrying water from the Nidd Valley to Bradford over the River Wharfe near to Barden Bridge. | |
| Specifications | |
| Length | 32 miles (51 km) | 
| Status | Open | 
| History | |
| Original owner | Bradford Corporation Water Works | 
| Principal engineer | Morrison & Mason Ltd | 
| Date completed | 1899 | 
| Geography | |
| Start point | Scar House Reservoir, North Yorkshire | 
| End point | Chellow Heights water treatment plant, West Yorkshire | 
The Nidd Aqueduct is an aqueduct or man-made watercourse in North Yorkshire, England. It feeds water from Angram and Scar House reservoirs in upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire 32 mi (51 km) to Bradford in West Yorkshire. The aqueduct supplies 21,000,000 imp gal (95,000 m3) of water per day to Chellow Heights water treatment works. The aqueduct and the reservoirs it connects to are all maintained by Yorkshire Water.