Clear Creek Dam (Washington)

Clear Creek Dam
CountryUnited States
StatusOperational
Opening date1915
Built byUnited States Bureau of Reclamation
Designed byUnited States Bureau of Reclamation

Clear Creek Dam (National ID # WA00264) is a dam in Yakima County, Washington.

The concrete thin-arch dam was originally completed in 1915 by the United States Bureau of Reclamation at a height of 62 feet (19 m) and 404 feet (123 m) long at its crest.[1] Raised another 21 feet (6.4 m) feet in 1918 to its present height of 83 feet (25 m) feet, it was partially rebuilt in 1964 then found structurally unsafe in 1990, when it was drained to less than 5% of its design capacity. The dam was reconstructed (with a new reinforcing gravity-dam element buttressing the original thin-arch structure) and refilled by popular demand.[2]

The dam impounds the North Fork of the Tieton River, part of the Bureau's larger Yakima Project. Its use is now primarily recreational. Both dam and reservoir are owned and operated by the Bureau.

The reservoir it creates, Clear Lake, has a water surface of 260 acres (110 ha) and a capacity of 5,300 acre-feet (6,500,000 m3). Recreation includes boating and fishing, and the site is surrounded by the southern tip of the Wenatchee National Forest.[3] Also the YMCA of Yakima, Washington has Camp Dudley along its shores, a summer camp and retreat.

  1. ^ "Dam details - Clear Creek Dam - Bureau of Reclamation". Archived from the original on 2012-09-26. Retrieved 2012-08-18.
  2. ^ "Dam details - Clear Creek Dam - Bureau of Reclamation". Archived from the original on 2012-09-21. Retrieved 2012-08-18.
  3. ^ "Clear Lake Reservoir, Washington".