Red Rock Dam (Iowa) Explained

Red Rock Dam
Name Official:Red Rock Dam
Dam Crosses:Des Moines River
Res Name:Lake Red Rock
Location:Marion County, Iowa, United States
Operator:US Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District
Dam Length:56760NaN0
Dam Height:1100NaN0
Dam Width Base:13.40NaN0 (concrete base)
Construction Began:1960
Opening:1969
Cost:$88,000,000
Res Capacity Total:114,400 cubic feet (= max outflow)
Res Catchment:12,320 square miles
Res Surface:15250acres
Coordinates:41.3725°N -92.9808°W
Website:U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Lake Red Rock Project

Red Rock Dam is a dam in central Iowa, United States, on the Des Moines River, forming Lake Red Rock. It is contained entirely within Marion County. The nearest cities are Pella to the northeast, and Knoxville to the southwest.

The dam consists of a rolled earthfill embankment and a gravity concrete control section. The dam, at crest elevation of 797feet above mean sea level, is about 5200feet long and 95feet high above the flood plain. A compacted impervious cutoff trench to bedrock and a grout curtain in the rock are provided for underseepage control.[1]

It was constructed along with Saylorville Dam as a flood control project by the US Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District. Major flooding occurred in 1851, 1859, 1903, 1944, 1947, and 1954.[2] In 1960, the Corps began construction. The project was completed in 1969 at a cost of $88 million. The Army Corps maintains its local offices in Knoxville.

In 2014, work started to retrofit the dam to provide hydro-electric power. At a capacity of 36.4 MW it is estimated that annual energy produced by the project will be 178,000 MWh, or enough to power approximately 18,000 homes. The primary purpose of the dam will remain to manage flood control.[3]

Extensive recreational development along the lakeshore rapidly followed.

It was a key location in the 1972 movie A Thief in the Night and its 1978 sequel A Distant Thunder.Lake Red Rock was named after one of the lost towns under the reservoir, Red Rock.

The dam was supposed to take 3 years to fill but it was filled in 5 days to max capacity due to the prevented flood of 1969.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930200402/http://stinet.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA271741 Article title
  2. Web site: Red Rock Flood Damage Reduction . www.mvr.usace.army.mil . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20020131041112/http://www.mvr.usace.army.mil/redrock/flooddamage.htm . 2002-01-31.
  3. http://redrockhydroproject.com/