Overview
UWWTP Reeuwijk Brug is a closed advanced treatment plant in Reeuwijk, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands, with a designed capacity of 7200 m³/day. It served the local community before decommissioning.
UWWTP Reeuwijk Brug was a wastewater treatment facility located in Reeuwijk, a town in the province of Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. The plant had a designed capacity of 7200 cubic meters per day and provided advanced treatment, reflecting the high environmental standards typical of Dutch wastewater infrastructure. Although the plant is now closed, it played a role in managing municipal wastewater in the region. As an advanced treatment facility, UWWTP Reeuwijk Brug would have been subject to stringent regulations under the EU Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive (91/271/EEC), which requires advanced treatment for sensitive areas. The Netherlands, with its dense population and extensive water management systems, mandates high treatment levels to protect water quality. The plant's capacity suggests it served a medium-sized agglomeration, likely in the range of 10,000 to 50,000 population equivalents. The plant's treated effluent would have been discharged into local waterways, ultimately draining into the North Sea via the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta. This region is ecologically sensitive, supporting diverse aquatic life and serving as a critical migratory corridor for fish and birds. The closure of the plant indicates that wastewater treatment in the area has been consolidated or upgraded elsewhere.
Environmental context
The plant's discharge would have entered the local water system, flowing through canals and rivers in the Rhine delta before reaching the North Sea. This coastal environment supports important fisheries and bird habitats. The advanced treatment level helped minimize nutrient loading and protect downstream water quality in a region known for intensive agriculture and urban development.
Frequently asked questions
UWWTP Reeuwijk Brug was located in Reeuwijk, a town in the province of Zuid-Holland, Netherlands, near the A12 highway.
The plant had a designed capacity of 7200 cubic meters per day, indicating it served a medium-sized community.
The plant is listed as closed, likely due to consolidation of wastewater treatment in the region or upgrades to newer facilities.
As a Dutch plant, it operated under the EU Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive (91/271/EEC), which mandates advanced treatment in sensitive areas to protect water quality.
The plant's treated effluent would have discharged into local waterways draining into the North Sea, helping protect the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta ecosystem.
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