Apalachia Dam Explained

Apalachia Dam
Name Official:Apalachia Dam
Dam Crosses:Hiwassee River
Res Name:Apalachia Reservoir
Location:Cherokee County, North Carolina, United States
Operator:Tennessee Valley Authority
Dam Length:1308feet
Dam Height:150feet
Construction Began:July 17, 1941
Opening:February 14, 1943
Res Capacity Total:57800acre feet
Res Catchment:1018mi2
Coordinates:35.1678°N -84.2956°W

Apalachia Dam is a hydroelectric dam on the Hiwassee River in Cherokee County, in the U.S. state of North Carolina. The dam is the lowermost of three dams on the river owned and operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority, which built the dam in the early 1940s to provide emergency power for aluminum production during World War II. While the dam is in North Carolina, an 8.3miles underground conduit carries water from the dam's reservoir to the powerhouse located 12miles downstream across the state line in Polk County, Tennessee.[1] The dam and associated infrastructure were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2017.

Apalachia Dam is named for the crossroads community of Old Apalachia, located near the dam site in North Carolina, and the community's L&N railroad stop, known simply as Apalachia, which was further downstream on the Tennessee side of the state line.

Location

Apalachia Dam is located nearly 66miles upstream from the mouth of the Hiwassee River, which flows northwestward through Northern Georgia and Western North Carolina before emptying into Chickamauga Lake in East Tennessee. The dam is situated near the center of a scenic and relatively isolated valley sliced by the river as it winds its way through the southwestern fringe of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The Unicoi Mountains rise to the north of the dam, and the Nantahala National Forest surrounds the dam and its reservoir on all sides.

Apalachia Dam's powerhouse is located 12miles downstream from the dam at the base of a steep-walled gorge formed as the river flows between two mountain formations. The dam's 8.3miles conduit - all but 1600feet of which is underground - passes behind the cliffs on the south side of the river.

Capacity

Apalachia Dam is a concrete gravity diversion-type dam 150feet high and 1308feet long, and has a generating capacity of 93,600 kilowatts.[2] The dam's spillway is controlled by 10 radial gates with a combined discharge of 136000cuft/s.[3] Apalachia Lake stretches for 9.8miles to the base of Hiwassee Dam, and contains 31miles of shoreline and 1070acres of water surface.

A 900feet steel penstock connects the reservoir intake at the dam site to the 8.3miles conduit. The conduit emerges from a cliffside overlooking the dam's powerhouse, where it splits into two smaller tunnels which carry the water to a valve house. From the valve house, the water drops 200feet through two steel penstocks to the powerhouse turbines below. The total elevation drop from lake surface to power house discharge is 394feet to 436feet, depending on the lake level.

Background and construction

Private and public entities had been aware of the hydroelectric potential of the Hiwassee River since the early 1900s. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers identified several potential dams sites, including Apalachia, in the 1920s, and by the time the Tennessee Valley Authority was formed in 1933, several companies had bought up land and flowage rights in the Hiwassee Valley. TVA took the initiative in the valley, however, with the construction of Hiwassee Dam in the late 1930s. By 1941, the outbreak of World War II in Europe brought a drastic increase in the demand for electricity - especially to support aluminum production in the Tennessee Valley - and TVA quickly put together a plan to build several new dams, including Apalachia, all of which were authorized July 16, 1941. Work began on Apalachia the following day.

The construction of Apalachia Dam and its reservoir required the purchase of 4500acres of land, most of which was in possession of three private entities - the Union Power Company, the Hiwassee-Nolichucky Power Company, and the Hiwassee River Power Company, with Union holding nearly half of the 4500acres. After the initial purchase, the Hiwassee-Nolichucky Power Company sold TVA an additional 8100acres, nearly tripling the reservation size. Land for the conduit was transferred by the U.S. Forest Service. Since most of the land was in possession of private companies, only 22 families and 2.4miles of roads had to be relocated.

The construction of the conduit was necessary to exploit the 12miles stretch of river immediately downstream from the dam site in which the river drops on average 26feet per mile. The conduit's tunnel was built using blasting and a drill jumbo, and its 235feet surge tank was excavated into the rock near the valve house.Apalachia Dam was completed September 15, 1942, and its gates were closed February 14, 1943. The tunnel was completed April 1, 1943. The dam's first generator went online September 22, 1943, and a second went online November 17 of the same year. The total cost of the project was just over $24 million (equivalent to $ in).

Ecology

The construction of the Apalachia Dam eliminated the natural water flow on the Hiwassee River, causing the decline of Ruth's golden aster (Pityopsis ruthii), a major reason why the plant was placed on the Endangered Species List in 1985.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Tennessee Valley Authority, The Hiwassee Valley Projects Volume 2: The Apalachia, Ocoee No. 3, Nottely, and Chatuge Projects, Technical Report No. 5 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1948), pp. 1 - 13, 33, 34 - 35, 331, 493 - 494, 517, 526, 531.
  2. Tennessee Valley Authority, Apalachia Reservoir. Retrieved: 26 January 2009.
  3. Tennessee Valley Authority, The Nickajack Project: A Report on the Planning, Design, Construction, Initial Operations, and Costs, Technical Report No. 16 (Knoxville, Tenn.: Tennessee Valley Authority, 1972), pp. 10-11.
  4. USFWS. Determination of End. Status for Pityopsis ruthii (Ruth's Golden Aster). Federal Register July 18, 1985.