The reservoir was authorised by the Metropolitan Water Board Act 1935. Excavation work on the reservoir started in 1936 under the supervision of the Board’s chief engineer Jonathan Davidson but was suspended upon the outbreak of war in 1939. Work only recommenced in 1957 and was undertaken by W. & C. French. The reservoir was completed in 1962 and was formally opened by the Queen on 30 March 1962.
Construction
The reservoir embankment has a rolled clay core which extends down into the under-lying blue London clay. The core wall is 3.6 m wide at the base and tapers above ground level to 3 m wide at the top of the wall. The clay was taken from three borrow pits. On both sides of the core is a fill of mixed clay and gravel 0.9 m wide. The reservoir walls were constructed by dragging gravel from the floor of the reservoir but which was not compacted other than compaction by the construction machinery. The top of the embankment is 15 m above ground level. Over the London clay is about 6 m of sandy gravel. A study in 2009 identified that about 750,000 tonnes of sand and gravel could be excavated from the bottom of the reservoir. The inlet and outlet valve towers are located at the north east and north west corners of the reservoir.
Ownership
The Metropolitan Water Board operated the reservoir until the Board was abolished in 1974 under the provisions of the Water Act 1973 ownership and control was transferred to the Thames Water Authority. Under the provisions of the Water Act 1989 the Thames Water Authority was privatised as Thames Water.
Dimensions
The reservoir covers, has a mean depth of 15.3 m, a maximum depth of 17.8 m and holds 4,300 million gallons. The height of the embankment walls above ground level is 15 m, and the perimeter is 4,400 m.
Environment
s have been spotted on this reservoir. In the winter of 1963 100,000 gulls were counted roosting at the reservoir. As of 2020 Thames Water are reviewing the access arrangements for all three of the Walton reservoirs, The design of the reservoir has an effect on the fish population that can live in the reservoir, the concrete shores means that only European perch and ruffe can breed, except for where there are empty fish cages constructed with netting, which support some plant growth and this allows small numbers of cyprinid fish to breed. The low numbers of fish in the reservoir have led to the zooplankton being dominated by large sized cladocerans and Daphnia and to high growth rates in the few fish that live there. No fishing is permitted at the reservoir.
Solar panels
In March 2016 Thames Water commissioned a farm of solar panels onto the reservoir which at the time was the world's largest floating solar farm. More than 23,000 panels float on the reservoir generating 6.3 MW of power. The solar farm is expected to offset Thames Water's energy expenses used to power their nearby water treatment and pumping stations. The solar farm covers 1/10 of the reservoir's surface.