Boardman River Dams Ecosystem Restoration Project

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The Boardman River upstream flowing under the Union Street Bridge in Traverse City

The Boardman River Dam Removal Project is a dam removal project in Grand Traverse County, Michigan. It was created to remove three of the four dams on the Boardman River, which flows from Kalkaska County to the Grand Traverse Bay in Traverse City.[1]

History[]

In the late 1800s, Queen City (Traverse City) Light & Power and Boardman River Electric Light & Power established five dams on the 28-mile-long (45 km) Boardman River. Four of the dams survived into the 21st century; the fifth being Keystone Dam which washed out in 1961 and was never rebuilt.

Dams[]

Brown Bridge Dam[]

In 1921, the City of Traverse City built a hydropower dam 18.5 miles (29.8 km) upstream from the Grand Traverse Bay known as the Brown Bridge Dam. It was made of earthen materials and concrete. The dam, and all other dams on the Boardman River, stopped producing hydropower in 2005.[2] The dam failed in October 2012 during a dewatering mishap during the beginnings of the dam removal process. Removal ended in 2013. The once large Brown Bridge Pond created by the dam is now a large-scale restoration process with varied wildlife and plant species.[3] The dam and pond were within the Brown Bridge Quiet Area, which experienced an expansion of the trail system following dam removal.[4]

Boardman Dam[]

The Boardman Dam was originally built in 1894, and reconstructed in 1930. It and the large earthen dam created the Boardman Pond. The dam was demolished in 2017 and Boardman Pond was drained. The river was rerouted under the new Cass Road Bridge.[3]

Sabin Dam[]

The Sabin Dam was built in 1906, 0.8 miles (1.3 km) upstream from the Boardman Dam, and was rebuilt in 1930. This dam created Sabin Pond.[3] The dam was demolished in 2018 and Sabin Pond was drained.

Union Street Dam[]

The Union Street Dam is the only dam on the Boardman that is not part of the removal project. It sits on the Boardman River just east of Union Street in downtown Traverse City, hence its name.

Cass Road Bridge[]

In the years leading up to 2016, the one-lane Cass Road Bridge over the Boardman River was becoming more and more obsolete.

In May 2016, the Grand Traverse County Road Commission started building a new bridge. The old bridge was still to be in use until summer of the next year. The river was still flowing under the older one-lane Cass Road bridge and through the dam, and the new bridge was situated over grass.

In June 2017, Phase II of the project was started. The earthen dam upholding Boardman Pond was partially demolished so that the river could flow in a controlled path under the new bridge, built the prior year.[5] Cass Road was closed later on, with the Boardman Dam and one lane bridge demolished, Boardman Pond drained and water flowing under the newer bridge. The section of road where the one lane bridge used to be is elevated above the surrounding land because of the prior location of the bridge.

References[]

  1. ^ "The Fate of the Boardman River Dams". Home of the Boardman River Dams. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
  2. ^ Herringa, Karie (May 18, 2017). "Boardman River Dam Project: Years in the Making". 9 & 10 News. Traverse City, MI: WWTV-TV. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c "Boardman River Dams". Home of the Boardman River Dams. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
  4. ^ "Brown Bridge Quiet Area". City of Traverse City. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
  5. ^ Troutman, Matt. "Boardman Dam Removal Begins". Traverse City Record-Eagle. Retrieved November 11, 2017.

External links[]

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