The Kerry Central Regional Water Supply Scheme has been voted national Engineering Project of the Year for 2018, it has been announced at Engineers Ireland's Excellence Awards.
The €30 million project is now providing a safe and secure water supply for over 62,000 residents as well as industry and agriculture in the region, and serves the more than 1.1 million tourists who visit the region annually across Tralee, Killarney, Castleisland and Castlemaine.
The scheme’s new water treatment plant is among the largest in the country and provides over 50 million litres of drinking water every day, with the improved quality of water available now meaning the 62,000 local customers have been removed from the Environmental Protection Agency’s Remedial Action List (RAL).
The project by Irish Water, in association with Kerry County Council, and undertaken by Nicholas O'Dwyer Ltd, TOBIN Consulting Engineers and Glan Agua Ltd, won out in the flagship category of the ninth annual Engineers Ireland Excellence Awards, held in association with ESB, at a ceremony in the InterContinental hotel in Dublin.
The Engineering Project of the Year category is sponsored by Transport Infrastructure Ireland and is voted for by a panel of judges and the public.
Advanced water treatment processes
Eamon Gallen, managing director of Irish Water said: “Until the completion of this project, the local water supply lacked an effective system to treat the raw water abstracted from Lough Guitane.
"This meant that the areas supplied by the Kerry Central Regional Water Supply Scheme were at risk due to the lack of sufficient water treatment.
“Complicated by its scale, nature, and location, the project required advanced water treatment processes, including recycling to conserve water and the use of pumping stations and pipelines, culminated in the creation of a new sustainable supply of drinking water for residents, businesses and industry in the region.
"The project also included an upgraded hydroelectric power turbine and water storage of up to 15 million litres of water, which is the equivalent of six Olympic-sized swimming pools.
"We are delighted to receive this award tonight, so I’d like to thank all the project team including staff in Irish Water, Kerry County Council, Nicholas O’Dywer, Tobin Consulting and Glan Agua who met the size and scale of the challenge of this project and developed a solution that would safeguard the supply of safe, clean drinking water for so many people in Kerry.
"I also want to thank the public and the Engineers Ireland judges for this recognition which is hugely appreciated.”
In other award categories, Aoife Murphy won the prestigious ‘Chartered Engineer of the Year Award’ for her work relating to earthquake-damaged residential buildings in New Zealand.
[caption id="attachment_46807" align="alignright" width="200"]
ESB International Engineer of the Year Award recipient Siobhan Kennedy.[/caption]
The ‘Local Authority Engineering Initiative Award’ was won jointly by Leitrim County Council and Jennings O'Donovan & Partners Limited for the Lough Rinn International Rowing and Canoe Course Project, and by Wicklow County Council for the River Dargle Flood Defence Scheme.
Outstanding and diverse achievments
Pat O’Doherty,
ESB chief executive, said: “This year’s awards once again highlight the outstanding and diverse achievements of engineers across Ireland who have demonstrated exceptional engineering skills through their work whether at home, or aboard.
"Taking action and leadership to help Ireland build a fit-for-purpose and sustainable infrastructure is a national imperative, with engineers a critical part of making this a reality - and so ensuring Ireland has a ready supply of skilled engineers remains a vital societal and economic priority.
"Events like the Engineers Ireland Excellence Awards inspire and encourage in this respect, and I commend all the participants in the various categories of this year’s awards.”
Kevin Hayes, Muireann Hickey, Cian O'Leary and Jonathan Mullane of Cork Institute of Technology won the Siemens ‘Innovative Student Engineer of the Year Award’ for their mobility device, StrydeTech, a life-changing mobility enablement device providing independence and confidence to those who are unable to stand up on their own.
Liam Coleman won the ‘Best Presentation Award’ for his submission on Auckland's Motorways, while the Aran Sweater Market in Galway by TOBIN Consulting Engineers and Architectural Conservation Professionals, won the ‘Heritage and Conservation Award’. Lufthansa Technik Turbine Shannon won the ‘CPD Employer of the Year Award’.
Also honoured were Eoghan Lynch, chartered engineer and chairman of Arup Ireland, who was presented with the ‘ESB Outstanding Contribution to Engineering Award’ and Siobhan Kennedy, who received the ‘ESB International Engineer of the Year Award’.
Kennedy, an NUIG graduate, previously worked in Haiti to support reconstruction following an earthquake in 2010 and is currently a recovery adviser with the Housing Recovery and Reconstruction Platform in Nepal where she has supported co-ordination efforts since the 2015 earthquake which killed almost 9,000 people and destroyed more than 810,000 homes.
David Porter, divisional roads manager at the Department for Infrastructure, Northern Ireland, also received the ‘President’s Award’, which was presented to him by the president of Engineers Ireland, Peter Quinn, and sponsored by CRH.
"Immense contribution the engineering profession makes"
Caroline Spillane, Engineers Ireland director general, said: “Engineers are people who create, explore and innovate. Behind every design-led engineering solution are communities and families that benefit.
"These winning projects are the embodiment of the immense contribution the engineering profession makes as a community of creative professionals to Irish society. They are eloquent testimony to the capabilities of Irish engineers working both at home and abroad.
"I offer my congratulations to all the entries involved, with a special word of recognition for the overall
Engineering Project of the Year winner - the Kerry Central Regional Water Supply Scheme. This is an enormously impressive body of work that has transformed the water quality provided to 62,000 residents in that region.”
Other awards on the night went to Sunderland’s Northern Spire Bridge which won the ‘Geoscience Ireland Award’, while the ‘Design-Driven Innovation: Combined Sewer Interceptor Physical Model Test-Bed Project’ by Ward and Burke Construction Ltd and the National University of Ireland, Galway won the ‘Technical Innovation of the Year Award’ category.