The Lower reservoir is the larger of the two and has easier public access with a tarmac road giving vehicular access to a small car park at the southern end of the dam wall. Access to the Upper reservoir and the woodland around it is by permit, there is a track with a locked gate which gives access for water board vehicles from the A57 road. The Lower reservoir has a capacity of, with a surface area of, the dam height is and its length is approximately. The Upper reservoir has a capacity of, with a surface area of, the dam height is with an approximate length of 220 metres. Both the dam walls are faced with stone pitching in the upstream direction and have grass banking in the downstream direction. In 2005 the dam wall of the Lower reservoir underwent strengthening work undertaken by the firm Hesselberg Hydro who used open stone asphalt to face the upstream embankment. The two reservoirs are fed by streams which drain the Hallam Moors which lie to the immediate west and stretch up to Stanage Edge. The reservoirs have a catchment area of which has an annual average rainfall of. A former reservoir keeper's house stands at the northern end of the Lower reservoir's dam wall; this is now a private dwelling.
History
Water provision for the growing city of Sheffield was taken over from the private sector by the Water Committee of Sheffield Corporation in 1830. The Rivelin Dams were part of a series of reservoirs subsequently built to the west of the city by the Committee with the Lower being completed in 1845 and the Upper in 1848. When the Water Committee plans to build the Rivelin Dams were approved, a proviso was inserted into the agreement which stipulated that they must supply per day of compensation water into the River Rivelin for the benefit of the mill owners and other users further downstream. In the second half of the 19th century this compensation water often had to be provided by letting water enter the Rivelin valley from the nearby Redmires Reservoirs which was not an ideal situation. In the early 1900s it was decided to build the Rivelin Tunnel as an alternative way of providing compensation water from the Upper Derwent Valley.
Rivelin tunnel
Construction of the tunnel began in 1903 and was completed in 1909. It was built to use the plentiful supplies of the River Derwent as compensation water for the River Rivelin rather than draining the more valuable waters of Redmires Reservoirs. The tunnel is long, high and wide, it has a fall towards Rivelin of 1 in 3,600 which is 6 ft 7in over its entire length. The tunnel takes water which has come through a drain hole in the south east corner of Ladybower Reservoir and delivers it into the Lower Rivelin Reservoir with the tunnel emerging into a grass covered underground tank on the south bank at a point next to where the Wyming Brook enters the Lower reservoir. The tunnel cost £135,151, which was £13,000 under budget.
The water treatment works stand 800 metres east of the dam wall of the Lower reservoir. The works were constructed in 1913 and pumped per day of treated Rivelin water to the Hadfield service reservoir at Crookesmoor to supply the City of Sheffield. Further improvements in 1946 increased the flow to Hadfield reservoir to per day. The works also pump Rivelin water up to the Redmires water main against a head of. In 2008 the Civil engineering company J.N. Bentley installed a 120 kW turbine at the inlet of the works to generate renewable energy; this energy is then used at the works. In December 2015 work started on a £24 million project to upgrade the treatment works. The construction of a new building which will house new clarifying settlement tanks is taking place just to the west of the current works and is being carried out by the contractors Mott MacDonald Bentley. The project is due to completed by the end of 2017.