Auburn Dam
available by the Geoengineer Website
The Auburn Dam would be the
largest concrete arched dam in the
world. It was a project of the
Bureau of Reclamation. The
purpose of this dam was
hydroelectricity production,
recreation, water supply and most
importantly flood control of the
Sacramento valley. The dam would
have:

Structural height: 800ft

Crest length: 4000ft

Concrete volume: 6.5 million cubic
yards

In 1965, the project received the
Congress’s Authorization and
geologic and other investigations
began and finally suggested the
arch concrete dam type. With the
yellow arrow, you can see the flip
bucket spillway at the left abutment
of the dam. Also you can see the
foundation of the  left abutment of
the dam.
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The 1971 San Fernando earthquake and the 1975 Oroville Earthquake had initiated more extensive geotechnical investigations. As a
result of these investigations, a fault, which was part of the Foothill fault system, was identified and for that reason the design has
changed to a curved gravity dam.

The construction stopped because the scenario of failures increased the public awareness and stopped the project. A failure of this
dam would cause also the failure of the Folsom dam and would finally flood the city of Sacramento. Even though, this scenario was
not so possible, the probability of the existent truncated fault to cause a movement of 8-12inches could not be discounted.

For that reason, in 1975, the construction of the dam stopped.  

With the
red arrow is indicated the embankment. The embankment was overtopped during a flood for which the bypass tunnel was
not designed for. . The tunnel, since then, has been leading the waters through the mountain. This tunnel was designed probably for
a 20-year flood, and since so many years passed, the fact that it finally failed once should not be considered a failure.

Photo of the bypass tunnel.

Photo of the foundation of the right abutment of Auburn Dam



References:

Leaflet of the Bureau of Reclamation Mid Pacific region about the Auburn-Folsom Unit and information collected during the field trip in
the Sierra Nevada, as part of the "Engineering Geology" course curriculum, instructed by Professor N. Sitar, Department of Civil &
Environmental Engineering, University of California at Berkeley.