Diverting Reservoir
Diverting Reservoir | |
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Location | Putnam County, New York |
Coordinates | 41°23′01″N 73°37′48″W / 41.3837°N 73.6299°WCoordinates: 41°23′01″N 73°37′48″W / 41.3837°N 73.6299°W |
Type | reservoir |
Basin countries | United States |
The Diverting Reservoir (also known as Croton Falls Diverting) is a small reservoir in the town of Southeast, New York, in Putnam County immediately south of the village of Brewster, New York. Sited about 50 miles (80 km) north of New York City, it is part of the City's Croton Watershed. Construction impounding the East Branch of the Croton River began early in the 20th century and was completed by 1911.
The Diverting reservoir holds 900 million US gallons (3,400,000 m3) of water at full capacity, making it the smallest in New York City's water supply outside the City itself. Its drainage basin represents 8 square miles (21 km2) of the Croton Watershed. This basin includes the lakes, streams, rivers, and other bodies of water that flow into the reservoir. This includes the beginning portion of the East Branch of the Croton River, which is not impounded.
The Diverting Reservoir is connected to the nearby Croton Falls Reservoir via a channel and dividing weir allowing water to freely pass between. The water in Diverting Reservoir flows into the continuation of the East Branch of the Croton River, and then the Muscoot Reservoir, the collecting point for most of the Croton Watershed. It continues into the New Croton Reservoir, the final collecting point, then the New Croton Aqueduct. Water from the Aqueduct flows into The Bronx and the Jerome Park Reservoir before entering Manhattan and joining the Catskill Aqueduct. Their combined waters flow through Brooklyn before terminating in Staten Island.
In January 2007, the New York City Department of Environmental Protection began a $74 million project of improvements to the Croton Falls Reservoir and the Diverting Reservoir. (See Journal-News article dated Feb. 28, 2007) The upgrading and rehabilitation is part of the city's effort to comply with state and federal dam safety regulations. The work at the Diverting Reservoir includes new valves and pipes, along with redoing the spillway and some of the concrete surfaces on the 55-foot (17 m)-high dam. The connecting channel between the two reservoirs will be emptied, inspected and dredged. Construction at both sites is expected to continue until Jan. 31, 2010.