Lower Salmon Falls Dam
Lower Salmon Falls Dam | |
---|---|
Location of Lower Salmon Falls Dam in Idaho | |
Location | Twin Falls County / Gooding counties, Idaho |
Coordinates | 42°35′47″N 114°24′04″W / 42.59639°N 114.40111°WCoordinates: 42°35′47″N 114°24′04″W / 42.59639°N 114.40111°W |
Opening date | 1910 |
Operator(s) | Idaho Power Company[1] |
Dam and spillways | |
Impounds | Snake River |
Height | 38 feet (12 m)[1] |
Length | 983 feet [1] |
Reservoir | |
Total capacity | 10,900 acre feet (13,400,000 m3)[1] |
Surface area | 750 acres (1.03 km²)[1] |
Power station | |
Commission date | 1910, 1949 |
Turbines | 4 |
Installed capacity | 60 MW |
Lower Salmon Falls Dam is a concrete gravity-type hydroelectric dam on the Lower Salmon Falls of the Snake River, in the U.S. state of Idaho. The dam is located 5 miles downstream from Upper Salmon Falls, between Gooding County and Twin Falls County, Idaho.[2]
History
The Lower Salmon Falls Dam was originally built in 1910 by the Greater Shoshone and Twin Falls Water Power Company. Idaho Power Company acquired the plant in 1916 and rebuilt it in 1949. It's located at river mile 573.0. Nearby cities are Twin Falls, Mountain Home, and Hailey, Idaho.
The newer dam is 983 feet long, including a 180-foot, 38-foot-high overflow dam and has a powerhouse containing four turbine generator units with a capacity of 60 MW. Its reservoir is 6.6 miles long, with a 750-acre surface area, with a storage capacity of 10,900 acre-feet. It includes a 6-foot-wide, 510-foot-long fish ladder.[1]
Along with the Upper Salmon Falls Dam and Bliss Dam is part of Idaho Power Company's Mid-Snake Projects.[3] The Mid-Snake Projects in total have a nameplate capacity of 169.5 MW.[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hydropower Reform Coalition & River Management Society (April 2013). "Hydropower Project Summary - Mid-Snake River, Idaho" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-01-05.
- ↑ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lower Salmon Falls
- 1 2 Mid-Snake Projects, Idaho Power
External links
- Lower Salmon Falls Dam from idahoguideservice.com accessed September 22, 2015. View of overflow dam releasing water over the remnant of the Lower Salmon Falls]].