Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Jean Lesage generating station

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Country
  
Canada

Opening date
  
1967

Height
  
94 m (308 ft)

Opened
  
1967

Province
  
Québec

Construction began
  
1961

Location
  
Manicouagan, Quebec

Impounds
  
Manicouagan River

Length
  
692 m (2,270 ft)

Surface area
  
124 km²

Owner
  
Hydro-Québec

Impound
  
Manicouagan River

Jean-Lesage generating station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Manic‑1, Outardes‑4, Daniel‑Johnson Dam, Bersimis‑1 generating station, Centrale de la Première

The Jean-Lesage generating station, formerly known as Manic-2, is a dam located 22 km from Baie-Comeau built on Manicouagan River in Quebec, Canada. It was constructed between 1961 and 1967. On June 22, 2010, the dam and the generating station were renamed in honour of Jean Lesage, who was premier of Quebec during the construction of the complex.

Contents

Map of Jean-Lesage generating station, Baie-Comeau, QC, Canada

Dam

Jean-Lesage is a gravity dam "hollow type" with a spillway made of concrete. The reservoir starts at the base of Manic-3. The dam is considered run-of-the-river and is fitted with eight Francis turbines, with a total capacity of 1,145 megawatts (1,535,000 hp).

Construction and commissioning

Construction started on October 24, 1961. From June 2 to December 8, 1962, diversion tunnels were driven through the mountain to divert the river's flow around the construction site. The cofferdam that forced the water to use the diversion tunnels was completed on July 30, 1963, construction of the dam started the day after. By autumn 1965, the dam and powerhouse were sufficiently complete to put the first group of five turbines into service, the others were put in service at the end of construction. Commissioning was completed in 1967.

Tourism

It is possible to visit the complex during summer between the end of June and start of September. The 90 minutes visit consists of a guided tour by Hydro-Quebec which lets the visitor enter cavities of the dam and see a turbine in action within the powerhouse.

References

Jean-Lesage generating station Wikipedia