Detroit Dam is a gravity dam on the North Santiam River between Linn County and Marion County, Oregon. It is located in the Cascades, about 5Â mi (8.0Â km) west of the city of Detroit. It was constructed between 1949 and 1953 by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. The dam created 400-foot (120Â m) deep Detroit Lake, more than 9 miles (14Â km) long with 32 miles (51Â km) of shoreline.
The dam, dedicated on June 10, 1953, was authorized for the purposes of flood control, power generation, navigation, and irrigation. Other uses are fishery, water quality, and recreation. It was built in concert with the Big Cliff Dam downstream.
- Drainage area: 437 mi² (1,132 km²)
- Maximum inflow: 63,200 ft³/s (1,790 m³/s) 1909
- Lake Elevation
- Maximum pool: 1,574Â ft (480 m)
- Full pool: 1,569Â ft (478 m)
- Minimum flood control pool: 1,450Â ft (442 m)
- Usable storage (1,425.0 to 1,563.5Â ft) = 321,000 acre feet (396,000,000Â m3)
- Powerhouse
- Number of units: 2
- Nameplate capacity: 100 MW
- Overload capacity: 115 MW
- Hydraulic capacity: 5,340 ft³/s (151 m³/s)
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
Media related to Detroit Dam at Wikimedia Commons
- Corps of Engineers plots of lake level and flow for various intervals up to a year
- Reinhardt, Bob. "Detroit Dam". The Oregon Encyclopedia.Â