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Barragem de Castelo do Bode (Dam of Castelo do Bode Lake)

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The Barragem de Castelo do Bode (dam) is situated at the southern end of Castelo do Bode lake in central Portugal.

The dam, which takes it name from the adjacent village of Castelo do Bode*see footnote, began construction in 1945. The barragem took five years to complete and was opened in 1951. It links the two districts of Abrantes (east) and Tomar (west) by the N358 road, which traverses the structure.

The dam measures 115 metres in height and is the highest structure of this kind in Portugal. However the barragem is one of three dams forming Castelo do Bode lake, though is the largest.

The principle reason for building the dam was to provide drinking water to Lisbon, though with a mind to providing sustainable, green energy to the people of Portugal at the same time.

In the 1940s this was a very foreword thinking view and although the inhabitants of six villages within the low lying valleys  of the Rio Zêzere which were flooded, the economical and ecological gains the country has made it was surely worth it.

These underwater ruined 'schist' villages though now provide scuba diving enthusiasts with marvels to look out for and there are many scuba clubs who make regular dives to the sites.

The excavations works on Castelo do Bode barragem started in September  1947 when the River Zêzere was at it's driest. By July 1948 the work on pouring the steel reinforced concrete, which forms the structure began. By the following year (1949) the mechanical and electrical equipment began installation.

However it was only in 1950 when the dam structure was complete, did the long process of flooding the valley of the River Zêzere commence. The first of the generators was installed in 1951, the last of the generators was installed in March 1952, after the dam's inauguration.

In an exhibition of public works in Portugal, Castelo do Bode dam was heralded as 'pioneering and transforms the torrents of our big rivers in Portugal for tomorrow'.

Castelo do Bode Dam in Construction Castelo do Bode Dam From the Base Castelo do Bode original machinery
Construction of Castelo do Bode View from Base of Dam Original Control Panel

The hydro-electricity plant is situated at the base of the dam of Castelo do Bode and controls the disgorging of water into the Rio Zêzere by two large flood gates. There are three large inlet tunnels, now deep beneath the waters of Castelo do Bode, each measuring approximately four metres in diameter and are between 39.5 and 48 metres in length.

The hydro-electric plant has three groups of turbines, which were made by the English Electric Company, sited vertically, as well as two smaller auxiliary turbines sited horizontally.

When the barragem was first opened it took 140 employees to operate the controls, ensuring the level of water were maintained and the production of hydro-electricity was kept at a constant rate.

However in  However today (as of 2010) Castelo do Bode needs only 140 to control all 27 barragems (dams) in the central region of Portugal.

How Castelo do Bode got it's name

*Ernesto Antunes from Tomar, remembers clearly the time when Castelo do Bode acquired it's unusual name (castle of the goat). Ernesto, a child of seven at the time, accompanied his father, a taxi driver employed by engineers employed to prepare topographic surveys for the proposed dam in the 1930s. to visit the various sites they needed to inspect when the naming ceremony happened.

The naming, Ernesto said, occurred when he (holding all the relevant maps), the engineers and his father were driving up the valley where the dam now stands. The engineers commented on the hills surrounding the valley had a profusion of grey rocks which resembled a castle. At the moment of commenting this, the bleats of a male goat could be heard and they joked it must be the 'Castelo do Bode' or Castle of the Male goat. Strange, but true says Ernesto, who still lives in the area.

Castelo do bode turbines Castelo do Bode tunnels View from Power Station at Castelo do Bode dam
Castelo do Bode Turbines Castelo do Bode Tunnels Base of Dam
Inspection Hall at Castelo do Bode dam construction works on Castelo do Bode dam Inlet tubes of Castelo do Bode dam
Machine room Construction of the Dam Inlet tunnel construction
Barragem Castelo do Bode
 
Location Map of Barragem de Castelo do Bode
 
View Barragem de Castelo do Bode in a larger map

Interesting Facts about Castelo do Bode Lake

Total Capacity of the Lake - 1.095.000.000 m³

The two flood gates have a capacity of disgorging 4,000 a second

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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