See media
for old articles in Argus Newspaper 1860/1870s as well as
recent
2010 media coverage of the reservoir area becoming part of
the National Park.

Living by Water book available from Barwon Water
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Overview of the
Development of Geelongs's Water Supply
In
the beginning, the Barwon River was the main source of water for the
infant settlement of Geelong. Pumps installed on its banks raised water
for the carriers, some of whom did not bother with the pumps and dipped
buckets into the river to fill their casks, stirring up the mud. As
well as being muddy, the Barwon's waters were quite brackish due to
tidal influence. Settlers had to go as far as Buckley Falls for pure
water, or even relied on casks shipped from Melbourne.
The brackish
condition was partly overcome in 1841 when a stone weir was built
across the stream by convict labour, under the direction of Geelong's
first police magistrate, Captain Foster Fyans. Breakwater became the
common name for the weir and eventually the suburb nearby.
An
energetic pioneer shopkeeper, William Gray, took advantage of the
breakwater to install steam driven pumps on the river bank. Water was
pumped to the town through an iron pipeline, two and a half kilometres
long. On April first 1850 the first delivery of water was made from a
fountain in Market Square. The fountain proved inadequate and was
replaced by a large tank, 27 metres in circumference and supported by
stone pillars. It was designed to fill eight water carts in two
minutes. The Town Council and Mr Gray continually argued over the rent
for the site of the tank. The Council claimed the continuous stream of
carts churned up the roads leading to Market Square and said Gray's
charge of two shillings a cartload was exorbitant. But for many years
Gray's crude system, which continually broke down, was Geelong's only
water supply.
The Town Council was the leader in efforts to
procure a better water system. Continuous complaints to the Victorian
Parliament about the inadequacy of the supply finally led to Parliament
voting 200,000 pounds in 1856 to supply the town with water. But in
1858, one thousand Geelong residents, outraged to discover the money
had been spent on Melbourne's Yan Yean Reservoir, held a public
meeting. But Geelong was left to rely on Gray's tank or supplies
carried by water cart from the Barwon. Many citizens constructed
underground brick tanks to store water collected from the roofs of
their homes.
Year after year the battle for a water supply
continued. A serious fire in Geelong finally brought home the
importance of a reliable supply. The well known landmark, Singapore
Terrace, was burnt to the ground despite 76 loads of water dragged from
Gray's waterworks. Even Melbourne-loving politicians realized how badly
Geelong was equipped to fight a big fire.
At last the Government
gave in and, in May 1866, began to build a dam across Stony Creek in
the Brisbane Ranges 40 kilometres north of Geelong. But delays and
problems with the work meant that it was not until April 1873 that the
first tap was turned on at the Geelong Hospital.

Geelong's water
problems did not stop there. During the 1880s, there were many
complaints. On hot days Newtown was completely without water. In the
1898-9 drought, the Government tried to install pumps on the Barwon
River but there was an indignant outcry at a public meeting at the
proposal to pump the contaminated Barwon water into the system. Rain in
March averted the necessity.
The Government decided to construct
a diversion weir to take water from the Easter Moorabool to Stony
Creek. Its engineers recommended a channel carrying 23 megalitres a
day. Geelong engineers said 46 megalitres a day were needed. Geelong
wanted the channel lined. The Government saved money by leaving it
unlined.
Not surprisingly, a movement for the purchase of the
waterworks gained strength under the leadership of the mayor of
Geelong, Cr Thomas Bostock. The Government finally agreed to sell the
waterworks for 265,000 pounds. After 42 years of government control,
the Geelong Municipal Waterworks Trust was formed in 1907 with power to
supply water to all places within eight kilometres of the Geelong Post
Office and sixteen kilometres either side of the main Stony Creek
pipeline. Its first meeting was held on January 25th 1908. Two years
later the Trust assumed responsibility for sewering the city and the
name was changed to the Geelong Waterworks and Sewerage Trust.
When
the Trust took over in 1908, the waterworks consisted of the Stony
Creek Reservoir, a diversion weir from the Easter Moorabool to the
reservoir, an aqueduct to the pipe head basin at Anakie and a pipeline
from there to service basins at Lovely Banks and Montpellier. Since
then, water storage capacity and services have been increased
dramatically.
The Korweinguboora Reservoir was built on the East
Moorabool and two more reservoirs were built at Stony Creek.
Geelong
also agreed to buy water in bulk to supplement its Moorabool supply
from the 1929 Government built weirs on both branches of the Upper
Barwon River. These weirs were connected by a tunnel and the water
flowed by channel to the Wurdee Boluc Reservoir and then to Pettavel
service basin. This Otway water was piped to Geelong and the Bellarine
towns.
A new storage, Bostock Reservoir on the East Moorabool,
was added in 1954, but Geelong needed further supplies.
The
solution came when the Government sold the Barwon headworks to the
Trust and construction began on the west Barwon Dam. Completion of this
largest storage in the Geelong system in 1965 allowed the Trust to
reverse the process by selling bulk water to State Rivers and Water to
supply the Bellarine Peninsula and coastal towns as far as Anglesea.
Supplies were boosted again when the West Moorabool Water Board
constructed the Bungal dam near Lal Lal in 1972. This reservoir's
capacity equalled the capacity of all Geelong's storages at that time.
Its water is shared between Ballarat and Geelong with Geelong being
entitled to a third of the supply.
Barwon Downs ground water was
added into the supply in 1983 following the 1982/83 drought (the worst
on record in Geelong) when the West Barwon Dam, Bostock and
Koreinguboora Reservoirs all ran dry.
Description
of The Eastern Moorabool System
The
supply from the Eastern Moorabool River is the oldest of Geelong's
water supply systems and provides approximately one fifth of the city's
requirements.
The catchment area of this system is approximately
100 square kilometres in extent and is situated in the great Dividing
Range on the headwaters of the Eastern Moorabool River. The average
annual rainfall in the area is 760 mm and is confined mainly to the
winter months. The river generally flows for about seven months each
year and is dry for five months. The greatest part of the run-off from
the area occurs during the floods which follow the periods of heaviest
rainfall and these floods are controlled primarily by the
Korweinguboora Reservoir.
All this supply, at some stage,
flows through the Brisbane Ranges National Park. Prior to 1999, water
from the Lower Stony Reservoir was directed by pipeline through Anakie
Gorge and on to Geelong with the rest being directed to Anakie Basin
via channels and aqueduct. Since then Eastern Moorabool water is piped
through a new pipeline which runs from the Durdidwarrah storages across
the Park (under Durdidwarrah Rd and Hut Track) and on to Geelong. The
aqueduct and Anakie pipeline and Basin will be surplus to Barwon
Water's requirements.
Koreinguboora
Reservoir
This
is an earthen dam built across the Eastern Moorabool River and is
situated 80 km north of Geelong and 20 km east of Ballarat. The holding
capacity of the reservoir is 2,100 ML, which is relatively small and
approximately only one-third of the average run-off from the catchment.
The purpose of the dam is to control floods and to allow water to be
drawn off from the catchment area in quantities which can be
controlled. In other words, water enters the reservoir at rates which
vary and are dependent on the rainfall and in quantities which may fill
the reservoir in a few days. It leaves the reservoir, for transmission
to the Trust's main reservoirs, at a regular rate throughout the winter
months. In this way, the reservoir is sometimes filled and emptied
several times during one year.
Water from the reservoir, in the
first stage of its transit to the main storages, is allowed to flow
down the Eastern Moorabool River for a distance of 6.4 km to the
Bolwarrah Weir.
Bolwarrah Weir
This
weir consists of a masonry wall built across the river and is 5.5
metres high and 110 metres long. It impedes the flow of water in the
river and raises the level sufficiently to divert water out of the bed
of the river and into the excavated channel, call the Ballan Channel.
Bostock
Reservoir
This
is a storage reservoir formed by an earth and rockfill dam constructed
across the Eastern Moorabool just below its junction with Paddock
Creek. The holding capacity of the reservoir is 7,640 megalitres. The
reservoir is connected to the remainder of the Eastern Moorabool system
by an open channel 9 km in length.
Ballan Channel
This
channel has been constructed across country and runs generally in a
southerly direction for a distance of 37 km, passing through the
Parishes of Moorabool West, Gorong, Yaloak, Bungeeltap, Ballark and
Beremboke. The water from the Eastern Moorabool River - after being
raised in elevation by the Bolwarrah Weir - enters this channel and
flows out of the catchment area in which it was collected across
country and into the main storages which are situated in the catchment
area of the Little River in the Brisbane Ranges.
The Ballan
Channel is capable of transmitting 65 megalitres of water per day. The
water transmitted by the channels is discharged into the storages at
Stony Creek.
Stony Creek
The
main storages on the Eastern Moorabool system are at Stony Creek and
have a total capacity of ,761 megalitres. They receive and store water
from the Eastern Moorabool catchment, as described above, as well as
the very limited run-off from that part of the Little River catchment
area in which they are situated. This catchment extends to 13 square
kilometres in area and has an average rainfall of 710 mm. There are
four reservoirs at Stony Creek: 3 at Upper Stony Creek (Durdidwarrah),
and one at Lower Stony Creek (Concrete Dam).
Upper Stony Creek No.
1 Reservoir was formed in 1870 by constructing an earthen embankment
across Stony Creek. This embankment impounds 3,443 megalitres when
full. Reservoirs Nos. 2 and 3 were formed in the same area by
construction of banks around natural depressions. They contain 2,345
and 3,706 megalitres respectively when full.
Lower Stony Creek Reservoir was constructed in 1872 and, when full,
contains 267 megalitres.
In
order to reach the city, water from Upper Stony Creek runs through an
open brick-lined aqueduct, 10.5 km long, to the Anakie Pipe Head Basin.
There it is screened and piped to Geelong, a distance of 24 km, through
two mains, one 350 mm and the other 375 mm in diameter, which discharge
into the Service Basins at Lovely Banks.
The water from
Lower Stony Creek Reservoir is also taken to Geelong through the same
mains, but it does not run down the race to Anakie Pipe Head Basin. It
is taken by a 375 mm main through Anakie Gorge and joins the outlet
pipes from Anakie Pipe Head Basin downstream from the Basin.
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