Upper Nepean Scheme - Cataract Dam

Cataract Dam

Cataract Dam is a straight dam with an unlined side spillway extending from the left abutment. It is 183 feet (56 m) tall, 811 feet (247 m) long and holds 94,300 megalitres of water. Cataract Dam was the first dam built in the Upper Nepean Scheme, it was also first dam in Australia to use pre-cast moulded concrete blocks for the upstream face of the dam. The core of the dam is large (2-4½ ton) sandstone blocks, quarried onsite and cemented together. The downsteam face is of mass poured basalt concrete, with a basalt facing. A readily accessible source of suitable rock was located some distance away at Sherbrooke, also known as Ferndale, situated near the top of Bulli Pass. To transport the basalt from the quarry to the dam construction site, a 2 ft (610mm) gauge steam tramway, 8.8 km long, was constructed. Dam construction began in 1902 and was completed in 1907, and the spillway was widened in 1915. Ernest Macartney de Burgh was the supervising engineer for the project from 1904. Poet Banjo Paterson wrote a satirical ballad "The Dam that Keele Built" about the politics behind the construction of Cataract Dam.

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Famous quotes containing the words cataract and/or dam:

    The splendor falls on castle walls
    And snowy summits old in story;
    The long light shakes across the lakes,
    And the wild cataract leaps in glory.
    Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying,
    Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying.
    Alfred Tennyson (1809–1892)

    The devil take one party and his dam the other!
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)