Clifford Street
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"The biggest recorded flood in Leeds was in 1866, when 20 people were drowned and the water was knee deep on Kirkstall Road. The railway line at Bridge Road was waist deep in water, when the track was higher than it is today. The Agency has revised its estimates in response to climate change, and their current "extreme event" envisages the River Aire thundering past at 400 tonnes per second, and the water chest deep on Kirkstall Road."
- chameleon
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Cardiarms wrote: "The biggest recorded flood in Leeds was in 1866, when 20 people were drowned and the water was knee deep on Kirkstall Road. The railway line at Bridge Road was waist deep in water, when the track was higher than it is today. The Agency has revised its estimates in response to climate change, and their current "extreme event" envisages the River Aire thundering past at 400 tonnes per second, and the water chest deep on Kirkstall Road." Which gives rise to this, unpalatable as it might seem in may respects.http://www.secretleeds.co.uk/forum/Mess ... hLight=1Is it coincidence that the YW building at Bridge end is built on stilts??
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Cardiarms wrote: "The biggest recorded flood in Leeds was in 1866, when 20 people were drowned and the water was knee deep on Kirkstall Road. The railway line at Bridge Road was waist deep in water, when the track was higher than it is today. The Agency has revised its estimates in response to climate change, and their current "extreme event" envisages the River Aire thundering past at 400 tonnes per second, and the water chest deep on Kirkstall Road." "We're all doomed!"400 tonnes a second? That is very scary.
Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act – George Orwell
- chameleon
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chameleon wrote: Cardiarms wrote: "The biggest recorded flood in Leeds was in 1866, when 20 people were drowned and the water was knee deep on Kirkstall Road. The railway line at Bridge Road was waist deep in water, when the track was higher than it is today. The Agency has revised its estimates in response to climate change, and their current "extreme event" envisages the River Aire thundering past at 400 tonnes per second, and the water chest deep on Kirkstall Road." Which gives rise to this, unpalatable as it might seem in may respects.http://www.secretleeds.co.uk/forum/Mess ... hLight=1Is it coincidence that the YW building at Bridge end is built on stilts?? Indeed and as time goes by I find myself thinking that this must be a good thing, however distasteful it seems. When you look carefully at the flood maps, it's scary