Thames Estuary Airport
In 2012 the Mayor of London
Boris Johnson was proposing to build an airport south of the Thames
Estuary between Kent and Canvey Island. The concept was to flatten the
hills of Kent and use this land to build out into the Thames Estuary.
The author of this article submitted an alternative concept in an
attempt to minimise conflict with the existing inhabitants of the area.
The BJ proposal has safety problems to that have to be resolved; the
biggest one being that Southend Airport has a flight path directly
across the proposed site. (In all probability Southend Airport would be
closed) There is the risk that the Calor gas storage facility on Canvey
Island could also be a problem.
One of the biggest problems anyone has living around the Thames Estuary
is flooding; the proposed plan should incorporate a flood defence
barrier. This will not only benefit the local community but benefit
everyone that would be flooded from the Thames.

Overview of the Thames Estuary
Working from the assumption that nobody wants an airport on their
doorstep how can we limit the impact of such a proposal? The obvious
solution is to place the airport as far out as possible and in the
middle of the Thames Estuary.

Approaching the Thames Estuary
Airport
If we are building a barrier across the Thames then the possibility of
using this barrier to generate electricity would be a good addition to
the proposal. The normal approach to generating electricity would be to
store the water and release it gradually over time. This would hinder
ship movement and also cause the river to silt up. With a hydroelectric
scheme that can work on a difference in height of only 100 mm the
principle of using flow not pressure makes the scheme possible.

A view of the proposed flood gates,
locks, station and airport
A more detailed explanation
of the component parts
The airport with its runways and terminals is made up of floating
pontoons with the pontoons held together with cabling held under
tension. This entire block is held in place with piles. Each individual
pontoon has pipes that goes from the very top to the very bottom of the
pontoon. This enables rainwater to flow away rapidly and also allows
access under the pontoon so silt levels can be monitored and disposed of
if necessary.

One of the pontoons cut into sections
The floating airport is connected to the barrage and takes you
immediately to the train station and short-term parking. A continuous
light rail shuttle service takes you from the airport station to
Shoeburyness or the Isle of Sheppey.

Overview of the proposed station and
short stay car parking
The Shoeburyness site is the more problematic of the two as the barrage
comes in between Shoeburyness and Great Wakening. The old MOD site is an
ideal site for all the ancillary equipment and parking. Looking at the
entire project there is one property that needs to be demolished and
that property is at the end of the C2C line at Shoeburyness. It will be
necessary to demolish this one property to take the C2C line out to meet
the barrage.
Moving back to the central section of the barrage you will see the two
locks either side of the airport. There are bascule bridges for the road
and rail networks and on the sea wall side there are two massive
circular gates to protect against flooding.

Proposed shipping locks with flood
defence gates and bascule bridges for road and rail

View of airport from the West end (
London end )
The above view shows the
West end of the airport. To the extreme left you can see the piles that
hold the airport in place then we have the two runways, taxiway and the
airport stands and terminals. The buildings in red are for freight
traffic and airport services. Towards the top of these red buildings you
can see the airport control tower.

Flood defence gates.
The above drawing shows the proposed scheme for the dam gates. You will
immediately notice that there are no foundations included. As we are
having to build on clay this is a very specialised engineering skill and
will almost certainly involved piling down to bedrock and the inclusion
of a grout barrier.
The cream coloured blocks
will be concrete blocks that are not fixed into position therefore they
have some amount of movement. They can also be withdrawn and replaced if
they wear out. The entire structure is constructed in the way that it
can move slightly and still function. On top of the flood defence scheme
you will see the sea wall, two dual carriageways, railway tracks for a
light rail system and railway tracks for the mainline system. The flood
defence gates are kept under this infrastructure when not required.
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Last updated 2022-03-15