There are two Los Angeles Aqueducts, the First Los Angeles Aqueduct (completed 1913) and the Second Los Angeles Aqueduct (completed 1970).
The project began in 1905 with a budget of 24.5 million dollars. With 100,000 workers employed in its construction, the Los Angeles Aqueduct was finished in 1913. It consisted of 223 miles of 12-foot steel pipe, 120 miles of railroad track, 2 hydroelectric plants, 170 miles of power lines, 240 miles of telephone line, a cement plant, and 500 miles of roads. The aqueduct used gravity to carry the water, so it was relatively autonomous and cost-efficient. Apart from the catastrophic failure of the St. Francis Dam in 1928 that flooded the Santa Clarita Valley and most of Ventura County (resulting in disgrace and financial ruin for Mulholland), and an incident of sabotage by displaced Owens Valley farmers a few years previously, the aqueduct system has worked quite well throughout its history. It was built so well, in fact, that to this day the city still uses it to transport water.
The construction of the Los Angeles Aqueduct effectively ended the development of the Owens Valley as a farming community and devastated the ecosystem of Owens Lake. Mulholland and his associates, including Los Angeles Times publisher, Harrison Gray Otis have often been denounced for having used deceptive tactics to obtain the Bureau of Reclamation rights to the Owens River's flow. However, the aqueduct's water was crucial in the development of Los Angeles, and a rehabilitation of Mulholland's reputation has taken place in recent years.
Canals in the United States | Landmarks in Los Angeles | The Los Angeles Times | Historic civil engineering landmarks | Water in California | Aqueduc de Los Angeles
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"Los Angeles Aqueduct".
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