In the 1860s, s'Albufera was widely viewed as a malaria-ridden, unproductive swamp. Enter British engineers William Green and John Frederic Latrobe Bateman. They founded the New Mallorca Land Company with a bold vision: drain the marshes and transform the wetland into highly profitable agricultural fields.
The Canal Network: Workers dug the massive Gran Canal de s’Albufera to funnel mountain torrents into the Bay of Alcúdia, flanked by lateral catch canals (Sa Siurana and des Sol) to intercept groundwater.
Steam and Wind Power: Since the marsh sat at sea level, gravity alone could not drain it. They built the Sa Roca pumping station using state-of-the-art steam pumps and erected a network of traditional drainage windmills.
Bridges and Gates: They installed stone infrastructure, including the Pont dels Anglesos (The Englishmen’s Bridge), and one-way sluice gates to hold back the sea. See my previous post.
The Twist of Fate: By 1892, the company went completely bankrupt. Sea water continuously seeped backward through the porous coastal sand dunes, turning the reclaimed soil highly saline and useless for standard crops.
However, their financial disaster became nature’s greatest triumph. The abandoned network of deep canals and regulated pools inadvertently formed the perfect, diverse wetland habitats.
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