Drainage in Washington
Washington is a post-war new town designated in 1964 as part of the programme to rehouse communities from Sunderland's declining mining and shipbuilding areas. Built across the rolling landscape between Sunderland and Newcastle, Washington's drainage infrastructure is fundamentally different from the Victorian systems found in older Tyne and Wear towns. The town was developed in a series of numbered villages, each with its own planned drainage network, using materials and methods typical of 1960s and 1970s British construction.
The geology beneath Washington is dominated by Coal Measures, with the town sitting above extensive former colliery workings from pits including Washington F Pit, Glebe Colliery, and Usworth Colliery. This mining heritage has created areas of ground instability that affect buried drainage infrastructure. The River Don flows through the northern part of Washington, and properties near the river corridor, particularly around Barmston and the Pattinson area, face flood risk during periods of heavy and sustained rainfall. Northumbrian Water manages the public sewer network, but Washington's planned drainage also includes extensive surface water features, balancing ponds, and open watercourses that property owners may have maintenance responsibilities for.
Pitch fibre pipes are extremely common in Washington's earliest development phases, particularly in villages built during the late 1960s and early 1970s such as Concord, Albany, and Barmston. These pipes, made from wood cellulose impregnated with coal tar, were widely used because they were cheap and quick to install during rapid new-town construction. After 50 to 60 years, pitch fibre pipes characteristically delaminate, blister internally, and lose their circular profile, causing flow restrictions, recurring blockages, and eventual collapse. Many Washington homeowners are unaware their property has pitch fibre drainage until problems develop.
Later development phases through the 1980s and 1990s in areas like Sulgrave, Blackfell, and the Oxclose expansion used improved materials including early uPVC, but these systems are now themselves 30 to 40 years old. The most recent housing at Fatfield and around the Princess Anne Park area features modern drainage to current standards, but these connect to Washington's existing network. Washington's planned layout means drainage routing is generally logical and well-documented, which is an advantage when maintenance or repair is needed.