Sihlsee | |||||
Image Bathymetry: | Karte Sihlsee.png | ||||
Caption Bathymetry: | Map | ||||
Location: | Canton of Schwyz | ||||
Coords: | 47.1167°N 55°W | ||||
Type: | reservoir | ||||
Inflow: | Sihl, Minster | ||||
Outflow: | Sihl | ||||
Basin Countries: | Switzerland | ||||
Length: | 8.5km (05.3miles) | ||||
Width: | 2.5km (01.6miles) | ||||
Area: | 11.3km2 | ||||
Max-Depth: | 17m (56feet) | ||||
Volume: | 96e6m3 | ||||
Elevation: | 889m (2,917feet) | ||||
Cities: | Gross, Willerzell, Birchli, Euthal | ||||
Pushpin Map: | Canton of Schwyz#Switzerland#Alps | ||||
Pushpin Label Position: | bottom | ||||
Embedded: |
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The Sihlsee (in English sometimes called Lake Sihl) is an artificial lake in the Swiss canton of Schwyz, near the town of Einsiedeln. The lake was created by damming the river Sihl and flooding a section of the upper Sihl Valley.[1]
The lake feeds the, which is located 5km (03miles) to the north-east in Altendorf on the upper section of Lake Zürich (the Obersee) and which supplies electricity to the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB). Its concrete dam is 33m (108feet) high and 124m (407feet) m long. The lake is the largest artificial lake of Switzerland in terms of surface with a maximum length of 8.5km (05.3miles) and maximum width of 2.5km (01.6miles). The maximum depth is 17m (56feet), and the lake has an approximate volume of 96000000m³.
The power plant project started in 1932. A concrete dam and two viaducts over the lake were built before 1937 when the valley was flooded. As a result 107 farms disappeared completely and 1762 persons had to leave their homes.[2]
A failure of the dam could lead, according to studies, to an 80NaN0 high flood wave through the lower Sihl Valley reaching the Altstadt of the city of Zürich, the biggest city in Switzerland, within 2 hours. This threat has led the City of Zürich to develop, publish and test evacuation plans for the affected areas of the city, and especially the area around Zürich Hauptbahnhof railway station.[3]