Roodeplaat Dam | |
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Roodeplaat Dam wall in 2005, during an upgrade to the offtake structure. |
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Official name | Roodeplaat Dam |
Location | Gauteng, South Africa |
Coordinates | |
Construction began | 1955 |
Opening date | 1959 |
Dam and spillways | |
Height | 28.3 m |
Length | 143 m |
Impounds | Pienaars River |
Reservoir | |
Creates | Roodeplaat Dam Reservoir |
Capacity | 40 000 000 m3 |
Catchment area | 684 km2 |
Surface area | 403 Ha |
Roodeplaat Dam
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Roodeplaat Dam is a concrete arch dam situated on the Pienaars River (also known along parts of its length as the Moretele River and Moreletta Spruit), a tributary of the Crocodile River, which flows northwards into the Limpopo River. The dam is a warm monomictic impoundment with stable thermal stratification during the summer.[1]
Contents |
Roodeplaat Dam was originally an irrigation dam, and soon became popular for recreation. Later it became an important source for Magalies Water, a state-owned water board that supplies potable water to a large area north of Pretoria.[2]
Roodeplaat Dam's catchment contains a large part of the rapidly expanding City of Tshwane, which includes Pretoria. Two sewage treatment works feed treated effluent to the dam, resulting in highly eutrophic conditions comparable with those experienced in Hartbeespoort Dam. These conditions were already apparent in the mid 1970s [1] and have not improved.[3] Consequences of eutrophication include blooms of algae and cyanobacteria, and dense mats of water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes).
The Department of Water Affairs' Resource Quality Services directorate is housed on the banks of Roodeplaat Dam, near the wall.[4] This section is responsible for national monitoring of the surface water resources of South Africa.