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Upper San Leandro Reservoir

Upper San Leandro Reservoir
Upper San Leandro Reservoir is located in California
Upper San Leandro Reservoir
Upper San Leandro Reservoir
Location San Leandro, California
Coordinates 37°46′33″N 122°07′03″W / 37.77583°N 122.11750°W / 37.77583; -122.11750Coordinates: 37°46′33″N 122°07′03″W / 37.77583°N 122.11750°W / 37.77583; -122.11750
Primary outflows San Leandro Creek
Catchment area 21.5 sq mi (56 km2)
Managing agency East Bay Municipal Utility District
First flooded 1926
Max. length 6 mi (9.7 km)
Surface area 620 acres (250 ha)
Water volume 42,000 acre·ft (52,000,000 m3)
Surface elevation 459 ft (140 m)

Upper San Leandro Reservoir is an artificial lake in Alameda County and Contra Costa County, California which provides water for the East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD). It is impounded by the earth-filled San Leandro Dam on San Leandro Creek, located at the southeast end of the lake. Although it receives some runoff from its local watershed, most of the water is imported via the Mokelumne Aqueduct. The reservoir has a capacity of about 42,000 acre feet (52,000,000 m3), though its normal volume is about 30,250 acre feet (37,310,000 m3). The reservoir name includes "Upper" to distinguish it from Lake Chabot, several miles downstream, which was originally known as "Lower San Leandro Reservoir".

The reservoir was originally formed in 1926 when the first San Leandro Dam was completed, and it was first filled by the Mokelumne Aqueduct in 1929. It inundated a long section of the San Leandro Creek valley, including the towns of Valle Vista and Redwood. The original dam was constructed between 1924 and 1926 using the hydraulic fill method and was considered seismically inadequate. A new earth-filled dam was constructed in 1977, directly downstream of the old one, to provide protection against earthquakes. The new dam is 182 feet (55 m) high and 1,300 feet (400 m) long, containing 88,890 cubic yards (67,960 m3) of material.

Tributaries that flow into the lake include San Leandro, Moraga, King Canyon, Kaiser, and Redwood Creeks. The reservoir and its feeder streams have a population of landlocked rainbow trout whose migration to San Francisco Bay was blocked by the dam.

The reservoir is closed to boating and fishing, in order to protect water quality. However, there is a public trail system surrounding the lake.


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