Mabey Hire’s Durham depot supplied 450 metres of temporary roadway – known as TuffTrak® mats – at a discounted rate so that vehicles delivering equipment and materials including 1,000 tonnes of stone could access the site without damaging agricultural land.
The Tyne Rivers Trust project to build a fish pass at Shotley Bridge which is now complete aims to improve fish populations on the river Derwent by enabling a range of species such as lamprey, eels, grayling, brown trout, sea trout and salmon to move up and down the river for the first time since the weir was built 300 years ago to power a mill.
Jack Bloomer, Project manager at Tyne Rivers Trust says: "Gaining good access to a site is often one of the most difficult and time-consuming parts of a project for the Trust."
Typically, the option of track matting would have been out of reach for this project but thanks to the generosity of Mabey Hire, the site could be accessed whatever the weather without damage to the land.
Ben Szyman, Customer Sales Manager at Mabey Hire’s Durham depot, says: "We could see what an environmentally important project this is so were happy to support it in the best way we could."
The Tyne Rivers Trust project is the final piece in the jigsaw for enabling fish movement on the River Derwent following fish passes at Derwenthaugh and Lintzford which have already proved a success with a greater diversity and density of fish species now found upstream of those sites.
For further information and interviews please contact Kirsty McNaught at Tyne Rivers Trust on 01434 636900 / 07855 720343 or k.mcnaught@tyneriverstrust.org
Gaining good access to a site is often one of the most difficult and time-consuming parts of a project for the Trust.