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Laggan Dam

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Laggan Dam

Laggan Dam is a mass concrete gravity dam located on the River Spean south west of Loch Laggan in the Scottish Highlands. It forms the second reservoir for the Lochaber hydroelectric scheme.

The structure was built as part of the Lochaber hydroelectric scheme by Balfour Beatty for the British Aluminium Company and construction was finished in 1934. The supervising engineers were the firm of C S Meik and William Halcrow, now known as the Halcrow Group.

The dam was designated a Category B listed building in 1985. It was upgraded to Category A listing in 2011, following a review as part of Hydroelectric Power Thematic Survey 2010.

The dam is about 700 feet (210 metres) long, and 48 m (157 ft) high between the level of the foundations and the crest of the spillway. It is curved upstream like an arch dam with a radius of curvature of 2,000 ft (610 m), but works purely on the principle of a gravity dam.

The dam impounds Laggan Reservoir and Loch Laggan, which are connected via a short section of the River Spean. This was dredged and straightened over a length of approximately 1.3 miles (2 km) to the confluence of the Amhainn Ghuilbinn. The reservoir has a capacity of 40,000,000 cubic metres (1.4 billion cubic feet), between a top water level of 820 feet (250 m) OD and maximum drawdown level of 804 feet (245 m) OD, giving an operational range of 16 feet (4.9 m).

The whole crest of the dam, except for a section in the middle that houses equipment, is a spillway broken into 29 bays by piers that support a roadway across the dam. As well as the spillway, there are six self-priming siphons embedded into the centre of the dam, controlled automatically by system of air valves. The siphons are set to operate in pairs, priming at 820.5, 821.0, and 821.25 feet OD (250.1, 250.2, 250.3 m OD), and discharge through 4′2″ (1.3 m) diameter Glenfield-Kennedy jet disperser pipes. Laggan Dam was the first large siphon spillway used in the UK.

The foundations are built on granite, and the dam was built in seven sections, with copper strip and hot poured asphalt water stops in the joints.

Water from the dam is conveyed to Loch Treig through three miles (5 kilometres) of tunnel. From there, the waters travel through a further 15 miles (24 kilometres) of tunnel, 15 feet (4.6 metres) in diameter, before descending the hillside to a power house at Fort William through five steel pipes.

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dam in Highland, Scotland, UK, impounds the Glen Spean reservoir
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