Landfill Check

Land East of Rotherham Road / Formerly Beighton Coke Oven Works and Brookhouse Colliery

SpecialLiquid / sludgeIndustrialCommercialInert

Land East of Rotherham Road / Formerly Beighton Coke Oven Works and Brookhouse Colliery is a historic (closed) landfill site recorded by the Environment Agency near Rotherham. It received special (hazardous), liquid/sludge, industrial, commercial and inert waste between 1988 and 1991, covering about 1.7 hectares. Reference EAHLD04753, October 2025 data revision.

Full record

EA referenceEAHLD04753
Site nameLand East of Rotherham Road / Formerly Beighton Coke Oven Works and Brookhouse Colliery
AddressRotherham
Site operatorNot recorded
Licence holderBritish Coal Opencast Executive
Licence issued22 July 1988
Licence surrendered28 September 1992
First waste input22 July 1988
Last waste input28 September 1991
Area1.7 ha
Gas controlNot recorded
Leachate containmentNot recorded
Licensed siteYes
EA areaRidings NE
Grid reference444800, 383800

Source: Environment Agency Historic Landfill Sites dataset, October 2025 revision.

Boundary map

What these waste types mean

Special:
the licensing-era term for hazardous waste — asbestos, chemicals, oils. The category that most warrants a closer look.
Liquid / sludge:
liquid wastes and sludges, such as sewage sludge or industrial effluent. Can be mobile in groundwater, so worth understanding.
Industrial:
factory and process waste. Contents vary widely — some benign, some not; the site's operator and era are the clues.
Commercial:
waste from shops and offices — paper, packaging, food. Similar profile to household waste, usually less of it.
Inert:
builder's rubble, subsoil, concrete, brick. Doesn't decompose or generate gas; the lowest-concern category.

Other historic landfill sites nearby

What this data does — and doesn't — cover

  • Licensed-era records only. Waste licensing began in 1974. Older tips — especially small pre-war ones — are incompletely recorded, so absence from this data does not mean no landfill ever existed here.
  • Not the contaminated-land register. Councils hold a separate register of land determined as contaminated. A historic landfill entry is not a contamination determination, and vice versa.
  • Boundaries are indicative. Digitised at 1:10,000 scale; some are buffers around a point rather than surveyed edges.
  • Not a substitute for a formal environmental search. If you're buying, your conveyancer's environmental search checks this and several other sources.

EA Historic Landfill dataset, October 2025 revision. More on the methodology page.