The Ōpāwaho / Heathcote River provided Woolston with plentiful water for industries such as
wool scouring. The river became increasingly polluted until the Woolston industrial sewer was built in 1966. Flooding was also a problem until 1986 when the Woolston Cut began to allow flood waters to bypass a long loop of the river, known as the Woolston Loop. The long project, which cost NZ$2m, had as a consequence that the trees on the riverbank died as far upstream as the Opawa bridge, and that banks collapsed. Extensive investigations revealed that the trees died from
salt water travelling further upstream with every tide (with the salt killing the trees), that the soil structure changed (a
sodium and
calcium exchange in the
clay molecules weakened the soils) and the
tunnelling mud crab had extended its range up the river, further weakening the banks. As a mitigating measure, the Woolston Tidal Barrage was built at the upstream end of the cut, which is only opened in time of floods. During normal flow regimes, the Heathcote flows through the Woolston Loop. But despite the Woolston Cut, parts of the Ōpāwaho / Heathcote River have flooded during heavy rainfall. During 2008,
Christchurch City Council consulted on a management plan for the section of river located between
Colombo Street and Opawa Road, which was formally adopted on 9 April 2009. The water quality in the Ōpāwaho / Heathcote River is rated poorly by the Christchurch City Council in 2020. Eight of the thirteen worst monitored sites in rivers or streams in Christchurch were in the Ōpāwaho / Heathcote catchment. Work has been completed in 2021 on stormwater basins at the upper Heathcote to improve the water quality, manage flood risk with an added benefit of providing additional recreational spaces. These include the Curletts stormwater basin and the, Wigram east basin. Work continues on the Eastman wetlands storage basins, Sutherlands storm water treatment basins and the flood storage basin in Worsleys valley near the
Christchurch Adventure Park. In the heavy rain which caused flooding across Canterbury at the end of May 2021, the Ōpāwaho / Heathcote River did not flood any houses above floor level. This was despite of rain falling over a three-day period. The Christchurch City Council was pleased to see the work developing storm water basins had paid off. ==References==