Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Neustadt Dam

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Official name
  
Talsperre Neustadt

Height
  
32 m (105 ft)

Width (crest)
  
4.25 m (13.9 ft)

Opening date
  
1905

Length
  
134.6 m (442 ft)

Construction began
  
1904

Neustadt Dam wwwausflugszieleharzdeimagesausflugszieleneu

Dam volume
  
32,000 m (1,100,000 cu ft)

Similar
  
Hohnstein Castle, Poppenberg, Wippra Dam, Wendefurth Dam, Zillierbach Dam

The Neustadt Dam, also known as the Nordhausen Dam (German: Talsperre Neustadt or Nordhäuser Talsperre) is the oldest dam in the Free State of Thuringia in Germany. It supplies drinking water to the town of Nordhausen. The dam is a curved gravity dam made of rubble stone based on the Intze Principle. The dam was built in 1904–1905 in the southern Harz mountains and raised by a further 6.26 metres in 1922–1923. The impounded stream is the Krebsbach. The operator of the dam is the Thüringer Fernwasserversorgung; the water is supplied to the Wasserverband Nordhausen (Nordhausen Water Association).

Map of Talsperre Neustadt, 99762, Germany

Swimming and water sports are not permitted on the lake, but there is a public path around the lakeshore.

The dam was refurbished between 1997 and 2001. It was reinforced, waterproofed on the upstream side with asphaltic concrete, given an inspection walkway and an impervious blanket.

On the western side of the valley is a checkpoint (no. 218) in the Harzer Wandernadel hiking system.

References

Neustadt Dam Wikipedia