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Aldeadavila Dam (Wikimedia)

Aldeadávila Dam is a concrete arch-gravity dam on the Douro River (also known as
the Duero River) on the border between Spain and Portugal.[6] The Douro River forms
the international boundary between Portugal and Spain. The nearest Spanish town is
Aldeadávila de la Ribera in the Province of Salamanca, about 11.3 kilometres (7.0 mi) to
the east. The nearest Portuguese town is Fornos in Bragança District, about
8 kilometres (5.0 mi) to the southwest. The Portuguese side of the river around the dam
site lies within the International Douro Natural Park.

Contents

 1 About the dam


1.1 Power plant
 2 In popular culture
 3 References
 4 External links

About the dam

In 1864, Portugal and Spain signed the "Treaty of Limits" (ratified in 1866), which
established the present international boundaries of the two nations.[7][8] A treaty on
transboundary rivers clarifying issues regarding the use of such rivers was signed and
affirmed in 1912.[7] A treaty regulating the development of hydroelectric facilities on the
Douro River was signed in 1927.[7] The Aldeadávila Dam was built by Spain pursuant to
these treaties, and was the final dam to be built by Spain on the section of river alloted
to that country.[3]

The dam is 140 metres (460 ft) high[2] and its cost was estimated in 1962 at
US$60,000,000 (about $443.5 million in 2010 inflated-adjusted dollars).[1] It was one
of a series of very high dams built in Europe in the two decades after World War II
which incorporated a downstream face inclined toward the upstream flow.[2] This
simplified the dam's design and construction (although it required more concrete to
build), and more readily incorporated the spillways into the dam face.[2] Indeed, the
dam's face is nearly vertical.[9] Design work on the dam began in 1956, and construction
completed in 1963.[10] The structure was built by the Iberduero Ingeniería construction
firm. Pedro Martínez Artola was the design engineer.[10] The dam was built on high-
quality granite rock.[11] During construction, grouting was used to fill cracks in the rock

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which ran parallel to the dam's foundation, and on the Portuguese bank where two
fractures in the rock occurred.[11][12] The underground power station and tunnels were
excavated using a mining procedure known as large-chamber stoping, and the dam's
use of this technique is considered a textbook example.[13] The turbine and generator
hall and the transformer hall were both cut from solid granite as well. The turbine and
generator room is 140 metres (460 ft) long, 18 metres (59 ft) wide, and 40 metres (130
ft) deep.[3] The total volume of excavated material for all halls, rooms, and abutments
was 600,175 cubic metres (785,000 cu yd).[3]

The structure has eight overflow gates which channel water into four spillways.[3] The
spillways incorporate side piers on the upstream face to more correctly channel water
over the dam so that each spillway discharges the same amount of water.[14] The
spillways release their water slightly above the actual bed of the river,[3] creating a
waterfall effect when they are fully open. A spillway tunnel carved from granite in the
right bank of the river augments the spillways and provides for additional overflow.[3]
The total spillway capacity is half that of Grand Coulee Dam.[3] The Export-Import
Bank of the United States provided $8.9 million (about $67.2 million in 2010 inflation-
adjusted dollars) in credits in 1958 to Iberduero enable it to purchase six 120 Megawatt
(MW) turbines and other electrical equipment for the power generating station, all of
which was supplied by American firms.[15]

The dam won Spain an international reputation as a builder of very large dams.[16] The
dam's eye-catching, "ski jump" style spillways are its most noted feature, and have been
called "outstanding" by leading dam engineers.[17]

The canyon through which the Douro River flows is exceptionally deep and narrow,
leaving behind a reservoir that has a relatively small surface area for its immense size.
In some ways, this limits use of the reservoir for recreational activities. However, the
Aldeadávila Dam reservoir is a popular one for boating.[18]

2
Power Plant

The Aldeadávila Dam has a 422 MW pumped-storage capability.[19] The dam's power
plant contains 2 x 211 MW pumped-storage generators than can generate power in the
normal way by allowing water to flow through its turbines.[20] However, during periods
when the demand for electricity is low (such as evenings, weekends, or during seasonal
fluctuations), the dam can use its excess power generating capacity to pump water back
into the reservoir—enhancing reservoir capacity and storing water for periods when the
demand for electricity is high. At the time it was constructed, the Aldeadávila Dam had
the largest pumping station in Europe.[21]

The Aldeadávila Dam has two diversion tunnels, each 1,400 metres (4,600 ft) in
length.[3][22] Each tunnel has a 53-metre (174 ft) high surge tank.[3] The dam also
contains more than 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) of tunnels which divert water to the electrical
generation turbines.[23] There are six penstock tunnels, each about 5 metres (16 ft) in
diameter.[3] The design of the penstocks and auxiliary spillways using these tunnels has
proved to be an issue, however. Cavitation problems have damaged these tunnels in the
past.[24] Until the Alcantara Dam was built in 1969, the Aldeadávila Dam was the largest
hydroelectric power plant in Europe.[3][25] As of 2010, it remains the largest in Spain.[26]
The dam's hydroelectric power station originally housed six 170,000 horsepower
Francis turbines which generated 718 MW, about half that of Hoover Dam.[3] In 1987,
the Aldeadávila II power station extension was completed, boosting generating capacity
by 400 MW.[27]

In popular culture

A 30-minute documentary about the dam, La presa de Aldeadávila, was produced by


Iberduero (the power company that built the dam) in 1963.[28] Several scenes in the
1965 David Lean film Doctor Zhivago were filmed at the Aldeadávila Dam.[29] The
dam's famous spillways were opened for the filming, and are shown in the motion
picture open at full force. Another scene depicts workers walking into one of the dam's
enormous tunnels. The final scenes of Antonio Mercero's 1972 film, La cabina (The
Telephone Box) were also filmed inside the dam.

3
References

1. ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Spain Harnesses Swift Frontier River." Christian Science Monitor.
March 30, 1962.
2. ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Landau, Yu A. and Mgalobelov, Yu B. Non-Conventional Concrete
Dams on Rock Foundations. Rotterdam: Taylor & Francis, 1997, p. 173.
3. ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 Dominy, Floyd E. "Spain Increases
Dam Building." The Reclamation Era. 51:1 (February 1965), p. 1.
4. ↑ "Appendix 4. Manual Operation Combined With Automatic Gate System.
Aldeadavila on the Duero River, Spain." in "Operation of Hydraulic Structures
of Dams." Bulletin of the International Commission on Large Dams. Issue 49
(1984), p. 93.
5. ↑ "Reservoir: ALDEADAVILA". Embalses.net.
http://www.embalses.net/pantano-70-
aldeadavila.html&prev=/search%3Fq%3DPresa%2BAldead%25C3%25A1vila%
26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG%26rlz%3D1B3GGIC_en___US343%26prmd%3Div&
rurl=translate.google.com&twu=1&usg=ALkJrhhVYWYfenZiLfmxy3NriY1ilm6
yjA. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
6. ↑ Hydraulic Model Studies of Amaluza Dam Spillway. GR-25-76. Hydraulics
Branch. Division of General Research. Engineering and Research Center.
Bureau of Reclamation. United States Department of the Interior. December
1976, p. 9.
7. ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Dominguez, Damian; Manser, Reto; and Ort, Christoph. No Problems
on Río Duero (Spain) - Rio Douro (Portugal)? Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology Zurich. 2004, p. 9-10. Accessed 2010-07-24; Martínez, José María
Santafé. "The Spanish-Portuguese Transboundary Waters Agreements: Historic
Perspective." Water International. 28:3 (September 2003).
8. ↑ Fitzmaurice, Malgosia. Exploitation of Natural Resources in the 21st Century.
The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2003, p. 196.
9. ↑ Serebryanskii, V.M. "Engineering Bases of the Architecture of Hydraulic
Developments With Arch Dams." Hydrotechnical Construction. 7:7 (July 1973),
p. 660.
10. ↑ 10.0 10.1 Rubió, Ignasi Solà-Morales; Capitel, Antón; and Rispa, Raúl.
Birkhäuser Architectural Guide: Spain, 1920-1999. Basel: Birkhäuser, 1998, p.
126.
11. ↑ 11.0 11.1 Stagg, Kenneth G. and Zienkiewicz, O. Rock Mechanics in Engineering
Practice. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1968, p. 423.

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12. ↑ Judd, William R. State of Stress in the Earth's Crust: Proceedings of the
International Conference, 1963. New York: Elsevier Pub. Co., 1964, p. 640.
13. ↑ Jimeno, E. Lopez; Jimino, C. Lopez; and Carcedo, Ayala. Drilling and
Blasting of Rocks. New York: Taylor & Francis, 1994, p. 250.
14. ↑ Șentürk, Fuat. Hydraulics of Dams and Reservoirs. Highlands Ranch, Colo.:
Water Resources Publications, 1994, p. 37.
15. ↑ Export-Import Bank of the United States. Export-Import Bank of the United
States Annual Report. Washington, D.C.: Export-Import Bank of the United
States, 1959, p. 21.
16. ↑ "Spain." The New York Times. October 25, 1965.
17. ↑ Thomas, Henry H. The Engineering of Large Dams. London: Wiley, 1976, p.
502.
18. ↑ Lipscomb, Kelly. Adventure Guide: Spain. Edison, N.J.: Hunter, 2005, p. 156.
19. ↑ American Water Resources Association. Pumped Storage Development and
Its Environmental Effects: Proceedings. Milwaukee: College of Applied Science
and Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 1971, p. 174-175.
20. ↑ "Worldwide list of pumped storage plants". Bbjectifterre.
http://www.objectifterre.over-
blog.org/pages/Stations_de_pompage_turbinage_dans_le_monde-
1389849.html. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
21. ↑ Thomas, Hugh. Spain. New York: Time, 1962, p. 86.
22. ↑ Kyōkai, Nihon Damu. New Horizons: Topmost Dams of the World. Tokyo:
Japan Dam Association, 1963, p. 18.
23. ↑ Arteche Group. "Aldeadávila Waterfall - Salamanca (1962)." 10 Jewels of
Electrical Industrial Heritage: Spain and Portugal. No date. Accessed 2010-
07-24.
24.↑ Khatsuria, Rajnikant M. Hydraulics of Spillways and Energy Dissipators.
New York: CRC Press, 2004, p. 220.
25. ↑ American Water Resources Association. Pumped Storage Development and
Its Environmental Effects: Proceedings. Milwaukee: College of Applied Science
and Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 1971, p. 175.
26.↑ Boronat, Ernesto. "HYDRO POWER". Exergy. pp. 34.
http://www.exergy.se/goran/hig/ses/06/hydro.pdf. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
27. ↑ "Speedy Construction Puts Aldeadavila On Course." World Water.
January/February 1987, p. 47.
28. ↑ La presa de Aldeadávila. IMDB.com. No date. Accessed 2010-07-24.

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29.↑ Krafsur, Richard P. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures
Produced in the United States: Feature Films, 1961-1970. Berkeley, California:
University of California Press, 1976, p. 275.

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