A sewage works was built adjacent to the east bank of the
River Hull in the late 1960s, an ancillary to the construction of the large
Bransholme Estate to the east and south. The works was located to the south of the Wawne drain at
Roe Bank. A linear mound was constructed to the east, shielding views from the estate. The estate required a new drainage system to be built – effluent at the new plant was to discharge into the river. The works also included a water storage lagoon, built to hold water when the level of the river was high. By 1972 the new works was discharging of treated sewage effluent into the river. After the sewage works at Bransholme was closed, with effluent to be pumped to a new large waste water treatment works (Hull WwTW) near the Humber Estuary; the works was part of the £200 million 'Humbercare' sewage scheme built to comply with European standards on sewage disposal. The Humbercare system excluded surface water at Bransholme. In 2007 (see
2007 United Kingdom floods) a surface water pump failed at the pumping station, the failure led to a delay in the Bransholme area being cleared of water after the flood event. The area south-east of the storage lagoon, once in part containing the sewage works was developed as housing after 2007 (Selset Way). Following the floods the surface water storage and pumping station at Bransholme was upgraded. The storage lagoon was expanded by raising its wall, increasing storage to . To improve pumping capacity six
Archimedes screw pump of diameter were installed between 2014 and 2015, each with a pumping capacity of per second. ==Ecology==