Lar Dam

Coordinates: 35°53′21.58″N 51°59′45.54″E / 35.8893278°N 51.9959833°E / 35.8893278; 51.9959833
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Lar Dam
Francis-type
Lavarak: 2 x 23.5 MW Francis-type
Installed capacityKalan: 115.5 MW
Lavarak: 47 MW
Website
https://thrw.ir/st/73

Lar Dam (

Mazandaran, Iran. The dam is located within the protected Lar National Park, and situated just 70 kilometers northeast of the capital and the most populous city of the country, Iran
. The primary purpose of the dam is municipal water supply to Tehran but prior to the water reaching the city filtration plant, it is used to power the Kalan and Lavarak Hydroelectric Power Stations, with a combined installed capacity of 162.5 MW.

Construction

Lar Dam bridge
Coordinates35°53′21″N 51°59′48″E / 35.8892°N 51.9967°E / 35.8892; 51.9967
Characteristics
Width13 m
Location
Map

The construction began on the dam in 1974, and ended four years later in 1981. When the reservoir began in 1980, leakage was discovered downstream. The leakage is due to a karst foundation. The foundation was grouted from 1983 until 1989 with no success.[1] With the population growth occurring in Amol, there was a need for more water and energy. The ideal place for the dam was over the Lar river, in the northeast section of the city, at the elevated heights of the Kalanbasteh mountain on the slope of Mount Damavand. The area is called Polour, and operations began in 1984.

One of the aims for building the Lar dam was to supply part of Amol with drinking water; it was not possible initially to operate the dam at its nominal capacity, because of a water seepage problem. Water stored in the dam's reservoir is first transferred to the Kalan Power Station (35°48′24.87″N 51°47′29.46″E / 35.8069083°N 51.7915167°E / 35.8069083; 51.7915167 (Kalan Hydroelectric Power Station)) then to the Lavark Power Station (35°48′34.97″N 51°44′54.67″E / 35.8097139°N 51.7485194°E / 35.8097139; 51.7485194 (Lavarak Hydroelectric Power Station)), a distance of 3 kilometers from the Latyan Dam's reservoir, through the 20 kilometer long Kalan tunnel (3 meters in size). After electricity generation, the water joins and feeds the Latyan dam's reservoir. The Kalan Power Station was commissioned in 1998 and the Lavarak in March 2012 and July 2013.[2]

Uncontrolled growth and expansion of Tehran created a situation where the existing water resources at

million cubic metres) of water from groundwater resources of the city.[3]

Lake

Lar lake from Damavand mountain.

The lake is 84 km northeast of Tehran.

See also

Dams in Iran

References

External links