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Leibis-Lichte Dam

Coordinates: 50°36′3″N 11°10′24″E / 50.60083°N 11.17333°E / 50.60083; 11.17333
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Leibis-Lichte Dam
View of dam from the west
CountryGermany Thuringia
LocationDistr. Saalfeld-Rudolstadt, Municip. Unterweissbach, Lichte Valley
Coordinates50°36′3″N 11°10′24″E / 50.60083°N 11.17333°E / 50.60083; 11.17333
Construction began2002
Opening date2005
Dam and spillways
Type of damGravity dam
Height102.5 m (336 ft)
Length369 m (1,211 ft)
Width (crest)9 metres (30 ft)
Width (base)80.6 m (264 ft)
Dam volume13,500 m3 (480,000 cu ft)
Spillway capacity86.5 cubic metres per second (3,054.7 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
Creates5.6 million cubic metres (0.198×10^9 cu ft)
Total capacity32.4 million cubic metres (1.14×10^9 cu ft)
Catchment area72 square kilometres (28 sq mi)
Surface area122 hectares (301 acres)
Maximum water depth91 metres (299 ft)
Power Station
Installed capacity1 megawatt (1,300 hp)

The Leibis-Lichte Dam (German: Talsperre Leibis –Lichte) is a 102.5-metre-tall (336 ft) dam in the German state of Thuringia in the Thuringian Highland. The dam was completed in 2005 to impound the River Lichte, between the Lichte municipality section Geiersthal and Unterweissbach. To that particular storage reservoir belongs the Deesbach Forebay (German: Vorsperre Deesbach). The name of the dam, "Leibis-Lichte Dam" was derived from the close proximity to the municipalities of Leibis and Lichte, as well as from the Lichte River as being the main inlet.

Construction

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The Leibis-Lichte Dam was constructed in the time period from 2002 to September 2005.

Dam (dark grey) under construction, December 2004.

Inside the formwork, heavy equipment was used to spread and compact the large quantities of concrete.[1] Mini excavators and graders put nearly 2,000 cubic metres (71,000 cu ft) of concrete each day into the formwork blocks. Giant cable cranes, reaching over the valley, moved the concrete across the site, with the transport containers holding up to 6 cubic metres (212 cu ft) of concrete.[1]

Power station (in the masonry), Stilling basin and sliding housing.

Pictures

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Bickhardt Bau AG - Drinking Water for Thüringa", Bickhardt-bau.de, 2010, webpage: BH421.
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Media related to Talsperre Leibis-Lichte at Wikimedia Commons