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Lake Austin

Lake Austin
Lake austin 2005.jpg
Seen from Mount Bonnell
Lake Austin is in central Texas
Lake Austin is in central Texas
Lake Austin
Location of Lake Austin in Texas
Location Austin, Texas
Coordinates 30°17.66′N 97°47.18′W / 30.29433°N 97.78633°W / 30.29433; -97.78633Coordinates: 30°17.66′N 97°47.18′W / 30.29433°N 97.78633°W / 30.29433; -97.78633
Lake type Hydroelectric reservoir
Part of The Texas Highland Lakes
Primary inflows Colorado River (from Lake Travis)
Primary outflows Colorado River (into Lady Bird Lake)
Basin countries United States
Managing agency Lower Colorado River Authority
Built 1939 (1939)
Surface area 1,599 acres (647 ha)
Max. depth 75 ft (23 m)
Surface elevation 492 ft (150 m) above sea level

Lake Austin, formerly Lake McDonald, is a water reservoir on the Colorado River in Austin, Texas. The reservoir was formed in 1939 by the construction of Tom Miller Dam by the Lower Colorado River Authority. Lake Austin is one of the seven Highland Lakes created by the LCRA, and is used for flood control, electrical power generation, and recreation.

Lake Austin is a part of the Colorado River; it begins below Mansfield Dam and is principally fed by the outflow of Lake Travis. The lake meanders generally from northwest to southeast, with few significant tributaries; the largest are Bull Creek, entering from the north near where Loop 360 spans the lake at the Pennybacker Bridge, and Bee Creek, entering from the west just above Tom Miller Dam, where the lake ends. Its outflow through Tom Miller Dam then becomes the principal inflow for Lady Bird Lake.

Lake Austin is maintained as a constant-level lake by releases of water from Lake Travis upstream. The other Highland Lake reservoirs on the Colorado River are Lake Buchanan, Inks Lake, Lake LBJ, Lake Marble Falls, and Lake Travis upstream, and Lady Bird Lake downstream.

The first lake on the same site was named Lake McDonald, a reservoir formed by the construction of Austin Dam between 1890 and 1893. In 1900 a heavy rainstorm overwhelmed and destroyed the first Austin Dam, causing extensive flooding. The dam began to be rebuilt in 1915, but repairs were abandoned because of a contract dispute, and the unfinished dam was again destroyed in a heavy storm later that year. In 1938 the Lower Colorado River Authority began building the Tom Miller Dam; the dam was completed and the lake filled in 1939.


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