Thomson Dam (Minnesota) Explained

Thomson Dam
Location Map:USA Minnesota
Coordinates:46.6664°N -92.4072°W
Location:Carlton County, Minnesota, U.S.
Purpose:P
Status:O
Construction Began:1905
Opening:1907
1914-48 expanded[1]
2012 damaged
2014 reconstructed
Builder:Great Northern Railway
Owner:Minnesota Power
Dam Type:Earth Embankment, Concrete Gravity, Arch
Dam Crosses:Saint Louis River
Dam Height:Main: NaN15
Canal: NaN45
Dam Length:Main: NaN1600
Canal: NaN3500
Spillway Count:2
Spillway Type:gated
Spillway Capacity:NaN60,000
Res Name:Thomson Reservoir
Res Capacity Total:4352acre feet
Res Catchment:9154mi2
Res Surface:649acres[2]
Plant Name:Thomson Hydro
Plant Coordinates:46.655°N -92.3336°W
Plant Hydraulic Head:NaN375
Plant Turbines:6
Plant Capacity:72 MW
Plant Annual Gen:280 GWh[3]
Website:http://mphydro.com/

Thomson Dam, also known as the Thomson Hydro Station[1] or Thomson Water Project,[4] is an embankment and concrete gravity dam on the Saint Louis River near the town of Thomson in northeastern Minnesota, United States. It consists of a 1600-foot (488 m) long primary structure and multiple supplementary dams which, together with precambrian rock outcrops known as the Thomson formation, impound the river to create Thomson Reservoir.

The tallest dam in the complex is 51.6 feet (16 m) and the longest is 3500 feet (1067 m). A series of gate houses, a canal, forebay, and underground penstocks supply a hydropower plant located 3 miles away in Jay Cooke State Park. With an installed capacity of 72 MW and an annual generation of approximately 280 GWh, the Thomson project is the largest hydroelectric facility in the state.[5]

History

Thomson Dam was completed in 1907 by Great Northern Power, an operating division of the Great Northern Railway. The generating station was expanded in 1914 with the addition of Unit 4.[1] Unit 5 was added in 1918 and Unit 6 in 1948. Railroad tracks built into the generator floor allowed for installation and maintenance of the equipment. The complex was later transferred to the Saint Louis Power Company. Today it is owned by Minnesota Power, a division of Allete, Inc.[6]

Heavy rains in June 2012 created an historic flood in the region which overtopped the dam, breached the forebay canal and severely damaged the hydroelectric station. Following $90 million in reconstruction and upgrades, including the addition of a new emergency spillway, the facility came back online in November, 2014. Additional upgrades will continue through 2018, including removal of the original 46kV transmission line equipment in favor of other, higher voltage equipment that was added later.[7] [8]

Structures

The most visible part of Thomson Dam is the primary structure straddling the Saint Louis River channel near Minnesota State Highway 210. However, the Thomson Project is actually composed of multiple dams and control structures, several of which have been rebuilt and merged over the years. Today the United States Army Corps of Engineers National Inventory of Dams (NID) counts 18 structures as part of the complex, with 14 formally listed as separate.[9]

Thomson Dam - NID Registered Structures !Dam ID!Other ID!Name!Height!Width!Type
MN00604Thomson Dam15feet1600feetEmbankment and concrete gravity
MN00604S010Thomson Canal Dam45feet3500feetEmbankment
MN83020S011Thomson Dam #1-1/210feet90feetEmbankment
MN83021S001Thomson Dam #2A, 2B23feet530feetna
MN83022S012Thomson Dam #2-1/29feet130feetConcrete gravity
MN83023S002Thomson Dam #3
(Nos 2-3/4, 3, 3A, 4, 4A)
38feet1322feetConcrete gravity
MN83024S003Thomson Dam #523feet100feetConcrete gravity
MN83025S013Thomson Dam #5-1/223feet115feetConcrete gravity
MN83026S004Thomson Dam #651.6feet125feetConcrete arch
MN83027S005Thomson Dam #812feet100feetna
MN83028S006Thomson Dam #911feet100feetConcrete gravity
MN83029S007Thomson Dam #1011feet80feetConcrete gravity
MN83030S008Thomson Dam #11
(Nos. 11, 11-1/2 and Upper Gate House)
17feet365feetConcrete gravity
MN83031S009Thomson Dam #1212feet450feetEmbankment

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thomson Hydro Station . Minnesota Power: Our System . 2017-07-30.
  2. Web site: Thomson Reservoir . Minnesota Power: Reservoirs and Recreation . 2017-07-30.
  3. Web site: 2015 Integrated Resource Plan . Minnesota Power . September 1, 2015.
  4. Web site: Thomson Dam, Thomson, MN . John A. Weeks III . 2017-07-30.
  5. Web site: Listing of Minnesota Hydropower Facility Sites . Minnesota Department of Natural Resources . 2017 . 2017-07-30.
  6. Web site: Hometown Hydropower: History. Minnesota Power . 1979-04-23 . 2017-07-30.
  7. Web site: Peterson . Jana . Lund . Jamie . Carlton County rebuilds smarter after devastating 2012 flood . Pine Journal . 2017-06-22 . 2017-07-30.
  8. Web site: Minnesota Power invests in safety improvements to hydro system . Minnesota Power is an ALLETE Company . 2017-01-20 . 2017-07-30.
  9. Web site: CorpsMap: National Inventory of Dams . United States Army Corps of Engineers . October 2016 . 29 Jul 2017.