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Nagarjunasagar

Nagarjuna Sagar Dam
NagarjunaSagarDam.JPG
నాగార్జునసాగర్ ఆనకట్ట
Nagarjuna Sagar Dam
Nagarjuna Sagar Dam is located in India
Nagarjuna Sagar Dam
Location of Nagarjuna Sagar Dam in India
Official name నాగార్జునసాగర్ ఆనకట్ట
Nagarjuna Sagar Dam
Location Nalgonda District,Telangana and Guntur District,Andhra Pradesh
Coordinates 16°34′32″N 79°18′42″E / 16.57556°N 79.31167°E / 16.57556; 79.31167Coordinates: 16°34′32″N 79°18′42″E / 16.57556°N 79.31167°E / 16.57556; 79.31167
Construction began 10 December 1955
Opening date 1967
Construction cost 132.32crore rupees
Dam and spillways
Impounds Krishna River
Height 124 metres (407 ft) from river level
Length 1,550 metres (5,085 ft)
Reservoir
Creates Nagarjuna Sagar Reservoir
Total capacity 11.56×10^9 m3 (9×10^6 acre·ft)
(408 Tmcft)
Active capacity 5.44×10^9 m3 (4,410,280 acre·ft)
Catchment area 215,000 square kilometres (83,000 sq mi)
Surface area 285 km2 (110 sq mi)
Power station
Operator(s) TSGENCO
Commission date 1978-1985
Turbines 1 x 110 MW Francis turbine, 7 x 100.8 MW reversible Francis turbines
Installed capacity 816 MW (1,094,000 hp)

Nagarjuna Sagar Dam was built across the Krishna river at Nagarjuna Sagar where the river is forming boundary between Nalgonda District in Telangana and Guntur district In Andhra Pradesh states in India. The construction duration of the dam was between the years of 1955 and 1967. The dam created a water reservoir whose gross storage capacity is 11.472 billion cubic metres (405.1×10^9 cu ft). The dam is 490 feet (150 m) tall from its deepest foundation and 0.99 miles (1.6 km) long with 26 flood gates which are 42 feet (13 m) wide and 45 feet (14 m) tall. Nagarjuna Sagar was the earliest in the series of large infrastructure projects termed as "modern temples" initiated for achieving the Green Revolution in India. It is also one of the earliest multi-purpose irrigation and hydro-electric projects in India. The dam provides irrigation water to the Prakasam, Guntur, Krishna, Khammam, West Godavari and Nalgonda districts along with hydro electricity generation. Nagarjuna Sagar dam is designed and constructed to utilise up to the last drop of water impounded in its reservoir of 405 TMC gross storage capacity which is the second biggest water reservoir in India.

The proposal to construct a dam to use the excess waters of the Krishna river was planned by the Nizam of Hyderabad and engaged British Engineers in 1903 to irrigate Telangana though the work was never funded and made no progress. Since then, various competing sites in Siddeswaram and Pulichintala were identified as the most suitable locations for the reservoirs.

The perseverance and logistics support of Raja Vasireddy Ramagopala Krishna Maheswar Prasad paved way for the identification and selection of dam site. The Raja made a matching grant of fifty two lakh Rupees (one hundred million British Pounds) and several thousand acres of ancestral land for the construction of the dam. The dam was built with local know how under the able engineering leadership of K.L. Rao a member of parliament from Vijayawada constituency.


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