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Alva B. Adams Tunnel

Alva B. Adams Tunnel
Grand Lake.jpg
Grand Lake west end Alva B. Adams Tunnel
Overview
Location Under Rocky Mountain National Park Colorado
Coordinates Grand Lake: 40°14′50″N 105°48′36″W / 40.247302°N 105.810013°W / 40.247302; -105.810013 (Alva B. Adams Portal)
Mary’s Lake exit: 40°20′47″N 105°32′07″W / 40.346381°N 105.535269°W / 40.346381; -105.535269 (Mary’s Lake exit)
Status Active
System Colorado- Big Thompson Project
Start Grand Lake (Colorado)
End Mary’s Lake Colorado
Operation
Opened 1947
Owner Bureau of Reclamation
Character water tunnel
Technical
Length 13.1 miles (21.1 km) long
Tunnel clearance 9.75 feet (2.97 m) diameter

The Alva B. Adams Tunnel is the principal component of the largest transmountain water project in Colorado, the Colorado-Big Thompson Project (C-BT). The tunnel transfers water from the western slope of the Colorado River drainage to the eastern Front Range of Colorado. The tunnel is 13.1 miles (21.1 km) long and has a concrete lined diameter of 9.75 feet (2.97 m). The tunnel drops 109 feet (33 m) in elevation along its length and runs in a straight line under the Continental Divide from west to east passing under Rocky Mountain National Park. At its deepest point, the tunnel is about 3,800 feet (1,200 m) below the surface of the mountain peaks. Construction began on 15 June 1940, but was suspended as a result of World War II priorities, from the end of 1942 to August 1943. The tunnel was holed through on 31 March 1944, an event that was broadcast throughout the United States by NBC Radio. The tunnel was posthumously named for its chief advocate, US Senator Alva B. Adams.

West of the Continental Divide the input of the tunnel is water pumped from Windy Gap Reservoir, Willow Creek Reservoir and other North Fork of the Colorado River drainages to Lake Granby. From Lake Granby the water is pumped into Shadow Mountain reservoir and then flows by gravity to Grand Lake, Colorado's largest natural body of water, from where it pours through the tunnel. Lake Granby is the second largest reservoir in the state of Colorado with a nominal capacity of 470,000 acre feet (0.58 km3). Once the water reaches the Front Range on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains it is used to generate electricity as it falls almost half a mile (0.8 km) through five power plants on its way down the Front Range. To get the power from the Front Range power plants back to the pumps on the western slope, a 5-inch (13 cm) diameter watertight nitrogen-filled conduit carrying a 69,000 volt electric power transmission line is mounted on the roof of the tunnel. This power is used to power the pumps on the western side of the tunnel while surplus power is sold. West slope water is stored on the Front Range in Mary's Lake, Lake Estes, Carter Lake (all reservoirs), Flatiron Reservoir, Horsetooth Reservoir and Boulder Reservoir for power generation or release after the peak snow melt months of May to July have passed.


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