Croton Gorge – Circular structure in the dam plaza

This strange circular pit containing pipes stands in the dam plaza. It’s surrounded by an iron fence and you can see the falls in the background. I have no idea what it is, or what its use was. Perhaps it was some kind of long abandoned water feature, possibly a fountain of some kind?. Maybe the pressure of the water forced it up through the pipes, from where it cascaded down and formed a pool, which subsequently drained into the Croton River? So far I’ve been unable to discover any additional information.

If I’m right that it was formerly a fountain then it’s a shame it’s no longer working. It must have been quite spectacular in its day.

Croton Gorge – The face of the New Croton Dam

It really is very impressive. The dam is 297 feet high from bottom to top; 266 feet broad at its base. The dam’s foundation goes down 130 feet below the riverbed and contains 850,000 cubic yards of masonry. At the time of its opening (1906), it was the tallest dam in the world.

This view looking upwards from the base gives a good sense of just how massive the dam is. I like the way the stairs take the eye part of the way into the scene and then the buttress takes you up the rest of the way to the top. I also like the textures of the stone. Apart from the blue sky the composition was largely monochromatic so a black and white conversion seemed in order.

For another view see below:

Croton Gorge – A view from beneath the dam

Here’s a view from the plaza at the foot of the dam. Once again you see the dual nature of the spillway – natural on the left; man made to the right.

I’ve posted about the Croton Dam before. See:

Croton Dam
Croton Dam Revisited
Croton Dam

However, although I spoken of the dam, I don’t recall saying anything about the bridge that goes over the spillway. I recently came across an interesting article on the Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct site: New Spillway Bridge at Croton Dam To Evoke Historic Design.

Apparently this is not the original bridge, which was built in 1905. Damaged by roadway salt, and spray from the spillway that bridge had to be replaced in 1975. Structural problems required that this bridge too be replaced and work started on the replacement in 2003.

Although the 2003 bridge is similar to the original 1905 version it’s not identical. According to the article

There are differences between the 1905 bridge and the new design. Twelve columns, equally paced to echo the detailing along most of the dam’s face, will fill the spandrels – the two triangular space between the top deck of the bridge and the outer curves of its wide arch over the Croton River; the 1905 bridge had 18 of the vertical elements, with varied spacing between them. While the 1905 bridge was black and the 1975 pan was a weathered dark brown, the new bridge will be silver-gray in color to blend with the masonry of the dam. To eliminate painting and reduce maintenance costs, the final finish will be obtained through a process called metallizing. Less visible will be such improvements as a higher load capacity, stainless steel reinforcements, and seismic constraints.

Some great photos of the dam while it was under construction can be found at: New Croton Dam Construction, circa 1902

Croton Gorge – A view from on top of the dam

Taken from the top of the Croton Dam, looking down onto the spillway. You can clearly see its dual nature: part natural, part man made. On the left the water rushes through the natural part, and on the right it flows over the man made part.

As an article on the Amusing Planet website states:

The dam features an unusual stepped spillway, located to the side of the retaining wall and is partly natural and partly man-made. Water flows down the natural portion in wild waterfall-like rapids, while at the man-made portion water spills down huge steps.