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This is the information for the Los Angeles Aqueduct that is on file at the Historic American Engineering Record at the Library of Congress. This material is in the public domain; no copyright claim is made or assumed by Chris Austin or Mavens Manor Productions.
Citation preview
THE LOS ANGELES AQUEDUCT
The Historic American Engineering Record for:
Compiled by Chris Austinhttp://www.MavensManor.com
The material in this presentation is derived from the History of American Engineering Record (HAER) project at
the Library of Congress. This material is in the public domain and is presented here in a more accessible format. No copyright claim is made or assumed by Chris Austin or Mavens Manor Productions regarding any material in this
presentation.
The Los Angeles Aqueduct is extensively documented in the HAER collection with over 150 photos and 18 drawings.
All the drawings are included here, but only a portion of the photos. You can view the record in its entirety by
clicking here:http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/CA3095/
For my presentation on the Los Angeles Aqueduct, click here.
SLIDESHARE READERS, PLEASE NOTE:
The drawings contain a wealth of detailed information, and are best read in full screen. They look rather ragged in this small window, but are truly
very nearly readable in full screen mode.
If you still have trouble reading the drawings, try accessing them at HAER site:
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/CA3095/
Mono Lake
Owens River looking south to Crowley
Lake
Looking north from Long Valley Dam & Crowley Lake
Long Valley Dam, start of Owens Gorge
Owens Gorge, looking north
Pleasant Valley ReservoirLocated at bottom of Owens
Gorge
Alabama Gates, looking W/NW
Alabama Gates, looking S/SE
Alabama Gates
Aqueduct, looking north to Alabama Hills
Aqueduct, Cottonwood Power Plant
Owens Lake, looking north
Owens Lake, looking east
North Haiwee Reservoir looking northOwens Lake in the distance
South Haiwee Dam and Power Plant
Note: Aqueduct now travels in covered conduit, siphons or pipeline.
Haiwee Bypass Channel and beginning of the Second
Aqueduct
South of Haiwee
Siphon, north of Jawbone
First and second aqueducts,Crossing Mojave Desert
Pine Canyon Siphon
First Aqueduct crossing Antelope Valley
Covered Conduit Crossing Antelope
Valley
Los Angeles Aqueduct crossing California Aqueduct
Soledad Siphon, Santa ClaritaSt. Francis Dam site
Bouquet Reservoir
Fairmont Reservoir, portal to Elizabeth Tunnel; California
Aqueduct is in the foreground
Unlined channel, aqueduct intake to the Alabama Gates
Lined aqueduct channel, from the Alabama Gates to Haiwee
First Aqueduct, showing the original ribbed construction
Covered conduit, First AqueductRose Valley
East Portal of the Mono Craters
Tunnel
Interior of tunnel, Elsmere Canyon to
Cascades
Jawbone Siphon, First Aqueduct
The second aqueduct, welded steel construction
Aqueduct Intake
The Owens River after the aqueduct intake.
(DWP was ordered by the court and has since begun restoration of the Lower Owens River.)
Earthen Dam atBouquet Reservoir
Intake Tower atTinnemaha Reservoir
Mulholland Dam**Note: These pictures are rare. For whatever reason, access to Mulholland Dam is difficult and photography is not allowed.
Owens Gorge Power Plants
Upper Gorge Power Plant
Middle Gorge Power Plant
Control Gorge (lower)
Cottonwood Power Plant
Diversion for Cottonwood CreekFeeds into power plant below
Settling pond for the intake
Raceway to intake
San Francisquito
CanyonPower Plant
#1
San Francisquito Canyon
Power Plant #2
Cascades for the first aqueduct
Cascades for the second aqueduct
Fletcher Pump
StationEver wonder what was inside
those anonymous-looking DWP buildings around town?
Now you know!
To view these documents and pictures online at the Library of Congress,
visit:http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/CA3095/
ABOUT THE HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD COLLECTION
The Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) and the Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) collections are among the largest and most heavily used in the Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress. Since 2000, documentation from the Historic American Landscapes Survey (HALS) has been added to the holdings. The collections document achievements in architecture, engineering, and landscape design in the United States and its territories through a comprehensive range of building types, engineering technologies, and landscapes, including examples as diverse as the Pueblo of Acoma, houses, windmills, one-room schools, the Golden Gate Bridge, and buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Administered since 1933 through cooperative agreements with the National Park Service, the Library of Congress, and the private sector, ongoing programs of the National Park Service have recorded America's built environment in multiformat surveys comprising more than 556,900 measured drawings, large-format photographs, and written histories for more than 38,600 historic structures and sites dating from Pre-Columbian times to the twentieth century. This online presentation of the HABS/HAER/HALS collections includes digitized images of measured drawings, black-and-white photographs, color transparencies, photo captions, written history pages, and supplemental materials. Since the National Park Service's HABS, HAER and HALS programs create new documentation each year, documentation will continue to be added to the online collections. The first phase of digitization of the Historic American Engineering Record collection was made possible by the generous support of the Shell Oil Company Foundation.
CLICK HERE TO ACCESS THE COLLECTION
Want to know more?Click here for a narrative slideshow on the Los Angeles Aqueduct
from Mavens Manor Productions
Also available online
Follow the path California’s first water project, learn a bit of it’s history and
find out how the Los Angeles Aqueduct works by clicking here
.
How is electricity generated and delivered to our homes? Click here to find out!
Follow the path of water as it flows from the Colorado River through the fertile fields of the
Imperial Valley and on to the Salton Sea by clicking here.
Hottest, driest, lowest. Death Valley is all of these.
Check out the wonders of Death Valley by clicking here
.
Thank you for looking!
Chris AustinMaven’s Manor Productions
http://www.MavensManor.com
For even more Maven, check out my photoblog athttp://wordpress.MavensPhotoblog.com
Learn more about California water athttp://www.mavensmanor.com/californias-water.html
For all the latest California water news, visit:http://aquafornia.com