Brighton Dam Rehabilitation Project

The project was substantially completed on December 17, 2019

Background

The Brighton Dam went into service in 1944 with the primary purpose of providing source drinking water for WSSC customers. Located on Brighton Dam Road, Brookeville, it spans the Patuxent River between Montgomery and Howard counties, it created the Triadelphia Reservoir. The reservoir holds approximately 6.3 billion gallons of source drinking water that is released into the Patuxent River and then captured by

T. Howard Duckett Reservoir and then to the Water Filtration Plant for treatment. The Patuxent Plant produces approximately 30 percent of the drinking water for WSSC customers.



The dam is structurally sound, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and MDE inspect the dam regularly and has found that the dam is well maintained and structurally sound. The work is needed to make repairs to the 70-year-old structure to prolong the Dam’s life into the future.

The Azalea Garden is scheduled to reopen in Spring 2020.



The Project

This project will replace the Intake Tower bar screens and sluice gates, replace the side plates and heaters for the tainter gates, strengthen the gates, replace the coating on the gates, and replace the concrete spillway surface. It is estimated to take approximately two years to complete.

Community Impact

The community impact of the project is that the Triadelphia Reservoir may be lowered significantly so that most middle range rain events will not damage the work efforts. Once construction begins recreation areas located along the reservoir, including boat ramps will be closed to the public. There will be some truck traffic and Brighton Dam Road will be reduced to a one-lane bridge over Brighton Dam with the traffic flow being controlled by traffic lights.



