Green Mountain Reservoir

Coordinates: 39°52′39″N 106°19′50″W / 39.8776°N 106.3305°W / 39.8776; -106.3305

Green Mountain Reservoir

A view of the reservoir in winter. The town of Heeney is visible on the far shore.
Location Summit County, Colorado
Construction began 1938
Opening date 1942
Dam and spillways
Impounds Blue River
Reservoir
Creates Green Mountain Reservoir
Power station
Installed capacity 25MW

Green Mountain Reservoir lies at the northern end of Summit County, Colorado along the Blue River. The Green Mountain Dam was built between 1938 and 1942 by the United States Bureau of Reclamation. The reservoir and its dam store water to benefit Colorado's Western Slope. Created by President Roosevelt as part of the Colorado-Big Thompson Project in 1937, Green Mountain was the first facility to be constructed. This is because it represents a great compromise that made the C-BT project possible: it compensates the Western Slope for water diverted to cities in Northern Colorado from Granby Reservoir further upstream on the Colorado River. Water from Green Mountain Dam is released either over the spillway, through the dam, or through the hydroelectric powerplant at the dam's base. The Green Mountain Power Plant has the capacity to generate up to 21,000 kilowatts, using two generators. Combined with the other five Federal power plants on the C-BT, enough electricity is produced annually to power almost 60,000 American homes. [1]

The reservoir has a capacity of 153,000 acre feet (189,000,000 m3) of water. At maximum capacity, the elevation of the lake is 7,950 feet, and the dam is 309 feet high. [2] The lake is popular with anglers, who catch rainbow trout, lake trout, brown trout, and kokanee. State Highway 9 follows the east side of the lake.[3] The town of Heeney lies on the western side, and the Green Mountain Reservoir Trail goes past the western side of the reservoir.

See also

References

  1. [U.S. Department of the Interior: Water and Power Resources Service, Project Data, pps 251-292. United States Government Printing Office, 1981.]
  2. FishExplorer.com. "Green Mountain Reservoir."
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