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<br />Figure 4.3 - Total Projected Future Water Demand (Potable + Non-Potable) <br /> <br />6,000 <br /> <br />1,000 <br /> <br /> <br />5,000 <br /> <br />4,000 <br /> <br />3,000 <br /> <br />.- Residential <br />- Com mercial/I ndustrial <br />- Schools <br />-Multi-Family <br />- Hotels/Motels <br />- City Irrigation <br />-Total <br /> <br />2,000 <br /> <br />~~~~~~~~~~~0~~~~ww~~~~~@~ <br />~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ <br /> <br />Average-Day and Max-Day Capacity Demands <br /> <br />Equally important to the water demand projections are system capacity demands. <br />Thus, as part of the demand forecasting, the delivery capacity needs were analyzed. <br /> <br />The City of Fort Lupton's raw water supply is from two sources. Alluvial wells supply <br />water for irrigation, Thermo and CGH and the CBT system is the source for potable <br />water. Currently, the City has an allotment of 8 cfs or 5.2 MGD of CBTlWindy Gap <br />water from Carter Lake. This mountain supply pipeline is operated by NCWCD. <br /> <br />The original WTP had a nominal capacity of 3.0 MGD. Due to backwashing operations, <br />cleanings, etc., each filter has an actual throughput of approximately 0.86 MGD. The <br />original throughput capacity was approximately 2.6 MGD through three filters. The <br />Town of Hudson owned 1/6th of this original capacity. To keep up with demands in the <br />City, the WTP was expanded in 2001. The design capacity of the expanded plant is a <br />nominal 5.0 MGD via five micro-filter units with a throughput equal to 4.3 MGD. The <br />average annual demand for 2005 was 1.3 MGD with a current max-day demand of 2.9 <br />MGD. <br /> <br />Clear Water Solutions, Inc. <br />City of Fort Lupton <br />2007 Water Conservation Plan <br /> <br />27 <br />