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Prairie du Sac Dam

Coordinates: 43°18′36″N 89°43′31″W / 43.3101°N 89.7253°W / 43.3101; -89.7253
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Prairie du Sac Dam
Aerial view of the Prairie du Sac Dam taken during a June 2008 flood.
Prairie du Sac Dam is located in Wisconsin
Prairie du Sac Dam
Location in Wisconsin
LocationNorth of Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin
Coordinates43°18′36″N 89°43′31″W / 43.3101°N 89.7253°W / 43.3101; -89.7253
PurposePower
Construction beganJanuary 1911
Opening dateSeptember 1914
Designed byDaniel W. Mead
Operator(s)Alliant Energy
Dam and spillways
Type of damGravity dam
ImpoundsWisconsin River
Height50 ft (15 m)
Length3,247 ft (990 m)[1]
Reservoir
CreatesLake Wisconsin
Total capacity193,200 acre⋅ft (0.2383 km3)[1]
Power Station
Installed capacity31 MW

The Prairie du Sac Dam is a hydroelectric dam on the Wisconsin River just north of Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin. It is owned and operated by Alliant Energy.[2] The dam forms Lake Wisconsin. It is the last dam on the Wisconsin River before its confluence with the Mississippi River about 92 miles (148 km) downstream, and it marks the upper end of the Lower Wisconsin State Riverway.[3]

History

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The dam was designed by Daniel W. Mead for the Southern Wisconsin Power Company led by Magnus Swanson. The company had completed the Kilbourn Dam upriver at Wisconsin Dells in 1909, but found it unprofitable, leading to the decision to build a larger dam at Prairie du Sac.[4] Construction of the new dam began in the winter of 1911 with general contractor J. O. Heyworth of Chicago and a crew of around 400 laborers.[5]

The construction of the Prairie du Sac Dam involved several engineering challenges. The width of the Wisconsin River and its bed of shifting sands required a deep foundation. Workers used steam-powered pile drivers to drive more than 11,000 timber pilings deep into the riverbed, and buried steel sheet piling across the river at the front and back of the dam. They then covered the array of wood pilings with rock and concrete to form a stable base for the dam and power station.[4][6] Crews obtained the rock and gravel from a nearby quarry. The large volume of material required a purpose-built narrow-gauge railway with a Woodford remote-controlled electric third rail. Temporary trestle bridges linked the construction site to the quarry and cement plant.[5][7]

Flooding and ice jams delayed progress on the dam's construction, but it began to generate power in September 1914. The power station utilized eight Allis-Chalmers generators. The electrical output was originally routed to Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In 1917, Wisconsin Power and Light, the predecessor of Alliant Energy, purchased the dam and began distributing the electricity to more local markets.[8][9]

The dam and its timber pile foundation have held in place for more than one hundred years, including through the June 2008 Midwest Floods that destroyed Lake Delton upstream.[10][11] In 2017, Alliant Energy began a project to reinforce the original wood pilings with additional steel micropiles as a preventative measure to extend the life of the structure.[12] In 2022 the company also began a multi-year project to replace the dam's original steel spillway gates.[13]

Structure

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Prairie du Sac Dam

The Prairie du Sac Dam is the widest dam on the Wisconsin River[11] and has a generation capacity of about 31 MW.[13] The dam has a hollow concrete structure and is anchored to the sandy riverbed by a pile foundation. The hydroelectric power station is a 330-foot-long (100 m), three story red brick structure at the west end of the dam. Adjoining the power station is a single 35 ft (11 m) by 170 ft (52 m) lock intended to allow continued navigation of the Fox-Wisconsin Waterway, but it is no longer in service.[14] The main crest of the dam is about 1,000 feet (300 m) long and includes a spillway consisting of 41 steel tainter gates, each fourteen feet (4.3 m) wide, separated by concrete buttresses. The east end of the dam extends into a 1,700-foot-long (520 m) earth embankment.[5][6]

References

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  1. ^ a b "National Inventory of Dams". nid.sec.usace.army.mil. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Hydro Energy". www.alliantenergy.com. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  3. ^ "Lower Wisconsin State Riverway". dnr.wisconsin.gov. Wisconsin DNR. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  4. ^ a b Bernstein, Rick (2002-08-27). "Wisconsin Stories: The Power of Water". Wisconsin Stories. Wisconsin Public Television. Archived from the original on 13 December 2005.
  5. ^ a b c "Construction of Wisconsin River Power Plant". The Contractor. Vol. XV, no. 14. 1912-07-15. pp. 29–32.
  6. ^ a b "Building Power House and Dam on Sand Foundation". Engineering News. Vol. 75, no. 24. 1916-06-15. pp. 1113–1116.
  7. ^ "Construction Work on the Prairie du Sac Power Plant". Engineering Record. Vol. 67, no. 22. 1913-05-31. pp. 603–604.
  8. ^ "From Water to Power: the Prairie du Sac Dam". Wisconsin Historical Society. 3 August 2012. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  9. ^ Kapp, Jody (2015-09-21). Sauk Prairie. Images of America. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-4396-5329-6.
  10. ^ Adams, Barry (6 September 2014). "Prairie du Sac Hydroelectric Dam hits centennial". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  11. ^ a b Luedke, Autumn (14 June 2018). "Flood of 2008: Sauk Prairie emergency responders face record number of calls". madison.com. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  12. ^ Luedke, Autumn (June 20, 2018). "Prairie du Sac dam project begins with spillway reinforcement efforts". madison.com. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  13. ^ a b Murphy, Kevin (8 Jan 2022). "Prairie du Sac dam repairs continue through 2026". Wiscnews.com. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  14. ^ "Prairie du Sac Lock" (PDF). American Canal Society. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
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