The Sierra Madre Dam is a dam on Little Santa Anita Creek, at the mouth of Little Santa Anita Canyon, in Los Angeles County, California. It is in the San Gabriel Mountains, south of the Angeles National Forest, on the northern border of Sierra Madre.
Sierra Madre Dam | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Location | San Gabriel Mountains, California |
Coordinates | 34°10′34″N 118°02′34″W / 34.17611°N 118.04278°W |
Purpose | flood control |
Opening date | 1928 |
Owner(s) | Los Angeles County Department of Public Works |
Dam and spillways | |
Type of dam | arch dam |
Impounds | Little Santa Anita Creek |
Height | 69 feet (21 m) |
Length | 200 feet (61 m) |
Spillways | 1 |
History
editAs a result of the flood of 1914, which caused an estimated $10,000,000 in property damage, in the San Gabriel Valley, the California Legislature implemented The Los Angeles County Flood Control Act that entailed a systematic study for flood relief. Results showed an average of 60,000 acre feet of water, valuing between half a million to one million dollars, being wasted from the San Gabriel Mountain watershed into the ocean that could otherwise be conserved and domestically used for nearly half a million people.[1]
In 1924, a bond issue was approved by voters in the amount of $35,300,00 to build systems that would store and conserve water including eight dams - Thompson Creek, Big Dalton, San Gabriel, Big Santa Anita, Eaton Canyon, Big Tujunga, Pacoima, Puddingstone and Sierra Madre.[1]
Dam
editThe concrete arch dam has a height of 69 feet (21 m), and a width of 200 feet (61 m). Construction was completed in 1928. It is owned by Los Angeles County Department of Public Works. At the lower face of the dam, water can be released out of a steel grille covered 4 feet (1.2 m) diameter outlet onto a spillway, and then into channelized Little Santa Anita Creek.
In the 1940s CCC—Civilian Conservation Corps workers built the concrete channel containing the creek, from the dam through adjacent Sierra Madre. They also constructed public street bridges and footbridges across the channel in the Sierra Madre Canyon neighborhood.[2]
Reservoir–debris basin
editThe dam's debris basin, when unfilled with sediment, and a small reservoir, can have a storage capacity of 51 acre-feet (63,000 m3), and a normal surface area of 1 acre. Its surrounding perimeter watershed area is 0.77 square miles (2.0 km2), with some slopes coated in gunnite.[3] The upstream drainage basin for Little Santa Anita Creek is much larger.
Little Santa Anita Creek is a tributary of Santa Anita Creek, which is a tributary of the Rio Hondo at their confluence in Whittier Narrows. The Rio Hondo is a major tributary of the Los Angeles River.
The dam and debris basin–reservoir are used for flood and sediment control, and for downstream fish habitat protection.[3]
Access
editAccess to the dam is restricted by locked gates and chain link fencing across the public Sierra Madre Canyon neighborhood side.
To the west, on Mount Wilson Trail Road in the neighborhood, there is a trailhead for the historic Mount Wilson Trail, a hiking trail that climbs up through Little Santa Anita Canyon to reach Mount Wilson.[4][5][6] Other trails, now within the Angeles National Forest, branch off it to the creek for canyoneering, and to other views and destinations. Waterfalls, including a 40-foot (12 m) tall one, are in the deep canyon above the dam.[6]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Collins, A. The Sierra Madre Dam: Its Inception and Design (1932): ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. Web.
- ^ Living New Deal Blog: "Sierra Madre Channel and Bridges, in Sierra Madre" Archived 2014-07-18 at archive.today . accessed 7.14.2014
- ^ a b Findlakes.com: Sierra Madre Dam and reservoir . accessed 7.14.2014
- ^ SummitPost.org: Little Santa Anita Canyon and the Mount Wilson Trail — with photographs.
- ^ The Far Side of the Sky Blog: "History of the Mount Wilson Trail"
- ^ a b Adventure Hikes and Canyoneering in the San Gabriels Blog: "Hike D14. Little Santa Anita Canyon"