Brooks Aqueduct Explained

Brooks Aqueduct
Type:aqueduct
Coordinates:50.5289°N -111.855°W
Location:Brooks, Alberta, Canada
Nearest City:County of Newell
Beginning Label:Established
Built:1912–1914
Original Use:Aqueduct
Governing Body:Parks Canada
Website:Brooks Aqueduct
Designation1:National Historic Site of Canada
Designation1 Offname:Brooks Aqueduct National Historic Site of Canada
Designation1 Date:18 November 1983
Designation2:AHRA
Designation2 Offname:Brooks Aqueduct
Designation2 Date:20 July 2000

The Brooks Aqueduct is a defunct aqueduct, historic site and museum originally built by the irrigation division of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company during the early 1910s located in Southern Alberta, Canada. The aqueduct was intended to irrigate a section of southeastern Alberta by diverting water east from Lake Newell from 1914 to 1979, and is located approximately 8 kilometres south of the City of Brooks. The main section of the aqueduct spans a 3.2 km valley at an average elevation of 20 metres. The structure has been designated a National Historic Site with an interpretive centre constructed nearby for tourists.[1]

History

The Brooks Aqueduct was conceived by the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) as a mechanism to irrigate a portion of the Palliser's Triangle in southern Alberta. CPR received a 3e6acre block of land between Calgary and Medicine Hat as a payment for the completion of the transcontinental railway, which was divided into the Western, Central and Eastern sections.[2] The Eastern section of the land grant provided access to the Bow River and the reservoir at the Bassano Dam, which was fed to agricultural operations through a series of canals and irrigation projects built by CPR.[3] [4] Hugh B. Muckleston, the Assistant Chief Engineer for the Department of Natural Resources for CPR was the first to envision the Brooks Aqueduct, noting an earthen filled canal would be inconceivable given the terrain conditions.[5] The decision was made to use reinforced Portland cement[6] with an open flume designed as a hydrostatic catenary curve.[7] The design also incorporated expansion joints to allow for movement along the long aqueduct due to expansion and contraction with varying temperatures, the joints were made primarily of copper. The expansion joints were placed every 80feet or fourth bent.[8] To cross the CPR main line, a siphon was built which operated on the Venturi principle 40feet under the railway tracks.[9]

The firm of Grant, Smith & Co. & McDonnell of Vancouver was contracted to construct the Brooks Aqueduct between 1912 and 1914.[10] At its completion in 1914, and beginning of operations in 1915 the CA$700,000,[11] at a length of 3.1 kilometres Brooks Aqueduct claimed to be the largest concrete structure in existence.[12] [13] The copper expansion joints had significant leaks following construction which caused damage to the concrete supports, this was mitigated by drainage ditches and efforts to reduce the leakage, furthermore the alkalinity of the water conveyed, combined with frost accumulation caused unavoidable deterioration to the concrete structure. CPR continued to refurbish the aqueduct through the 1920s and early 1930s, spraying gunnite over the rotting pedestals and flaking concrete shells.[14] Following the completion of these upgrades in 1934 the Brooks Aqueduct was transferred to the Eastern Irrigation District, a farmer-owned entity formed under the Irrigation Districts Act in 1935, this was part of a larger divestment in the region by CPR.[12] The aqueduct was used for irrigation for about 30 years. Its original capacity was .[15] and the 113,000 hectares of land which were provided with water led to a new wave of settlement.[16]

In 1969, the Alberta and Canadian governments assumed the responsibility of maintaining the structure under the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. The Brooks Aqueduct and Bassano Dam were evaluated, and it was found that the dam would require minor rehabilitation, while the aqueduct was no longer suitable for operations. A series of earthen canals were constructed as a replacement for the aqueduct, and after evaluating the cost of demolishing the structure, the governments decided it would be more financially prudent to fence the aqueduct off from the public.[17]

Legacy

The Brooks Aqueduct continues to stand to this day, although the structure itself is no longer structurally sound and has been fenced off since the 1970s. The Brooks Aqueduct and the immediate surrounding area was designated a National Historic Site of Canada on 18 November 1983 by the Government of Canada.[1] The Brooks Aqueduct would later be designated a Provincial Historical Resource by the Government of Alberta on 20 July 2000.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jayne Seagrave. Camping with Kids in the West: BC and Alberta's Best Family Campgrounds. 30 April 2015. Heritage House. 978-1-77203-041-9. 159.
  2. Web site: Canadian Pacific Railway . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  3. Book: Ted Stone. Alberta History Along the Highway: A Traveler's Guide to the Fascinating Facts, Intriguing Incidents and Lively Legends in Alberta's Past. 1996. Red Deer College Press. 978-0-88995-133-4. 79.
  4. Web site: The Eastern Section . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  5. Web site: Introduction to the Brooks Aqueduct . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  6. Book: Engineering News. 77. 1917. G.H. Frost. 469.
  7. Web site: Flume Design . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  8. Web site: Expansion Joints . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  9. Web site: Siphon Design . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  10. Web site: Construction . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  11. Web site: Brooks Aqueduct . Alberta Heritage Survey Program . Government of Alberta . 4 August 2020.
  12. Book: Ron Brown. Rails Across the Prairies: The Railway Heritage of Canada's Prairie Provinces. 30 June 2012. Dundurn. 978-1-4597-0216-5. 22.
  13. Book: The Interpreter. 1979. Western Interpreters Association.. 19–20.
  14. Web site: Maintenance . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.
  15. Book: Engineering Works of Calgary. 1915. 16. 2013-08-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924062811/http://www.ourfutureourpast.ca/loc_hist/page.aspx?id=3516154. 2015-09-24. dead.
  16. Book: Ron Brown. Dundurn Railroad 5-Book Bundle: In Search of the Grand Trunk / Rails Across the Prairies / Rails Across Ontario / The Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore / Rails to the Atlantic. 8 August 2015. Dundurn. 978-1-4597-3303-9. 699.
  17. Web site: The Fate of the Brooks Aqueduct . The Official Brooks Aqueduct Home Page . 5 August 2020.