Coquitlam Dam

Coquitlam Dam
Location Coquitlam, British Columbia
Coordinates 49°21′14″N 122°46′37″W / 49.35389°N 122.77694°W / 49.35389; -122.77694Coordinates: 49°21′14″N 122°46′37″W / 49.35389°N 122.77694°W / 49.35389; -122.77694
Opening date 1914
Operator(s) BC Hydro
Dam and spillways
Impounds Coquitlam River
Height 31 m
Length 290 m
Reservoir
Creates Coquitlam Lake
Surface area 1100 ha

Coquitlam Dam is a hydraulic fill embankment dam on the Coquitlam River in the city of Coquitlam, British Columbia. Although it has no powerhouse of its own, its waters divert to Buntzen Lake, making it part of BC Hydro's electrical generation infrastructure.[1] It is also one of the main reservoirs for the Greater Vancouver Water District.

History

The first Coquitlam Dam, built to raise the water level of Coquitlam Lake by five feet, was begun in April 1904, and completed in 1905. It was built to protect the water supply to powerhouses on Indian Arm, via a tunnel to Buntzen Lake, and also supplied water to New Westminster.[2] By 1906 the original dam was discovered to be leaking, and while repairs were made the leak continued through 1908, until a second dam was completed in 1914. At the time of the tunnel's completion, it was the longest power diversion tunnel in the world.[2] Due to seismic concerns, an embankment dam was built on the downstream side of the original rockfill dam in 2008.[3]

The Port Moody-Coquitlam Railway, no longer operating, was built to assist with the dam's construction.

References

  1. BC Hydro: Coquitlam River and Buntzen Lake Watersheds Retrieved on 22 February 2009
  2. 1 2 Will Koop: Coquitlam Watershed History Retrieved on 22 February 2009
  3. BC Hydro: Coquitlam Dam Seismic Upgrade Retrieved 12 March 2009

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.