My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Search
DWR_2717593
DWR
>
Dam Safety
>
2015
>
03
>
DWR_2717593
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/11/2017 11:09:13 AM
Creation date
3/3/2015 11:31:22 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Dam Safety
Document Date
2/27/2015
Document Type - Dam Safety
Report
Division
5
Dam ID
040110
Subject
CARRIAGE HILLS #2 (LOWER) DAM - FAILURE FORENSIC REPORT REVISED
DWR Send/Recipient
DSB
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
44
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
CARRIAGE HILLS NO. 2 DAM, Dam Failure Forensic Investigation Report Page 10 <br />February 27, 2015 <br />9/13/2013, 05:50 hrs –Country Club Road is gone (washed out) at the Fish Creek <br />crossing. Mr. Bonza said “No more road…not unexpected. In fact, it took too long <br />and as a result it flooded our basement before it broke”. He said the flood water <br />came up about 9‐inches in their basement and nearly covered the top of the <br />snowplow (00365.MTS) <br /> <br />9/13/2013, 09:23 hrs – 00375.MTS video shows flood damage in basement at <br />1551 Country Club Road (Bonza house) from overnight flooding, 9/12‐13/2013. <br />Water damage to kitchen, laundry room, tool room, bedroom, bathroom, storage <br />area, piano, etc. High water line reported as 3 inches above sill on the glass doors, <br />and about 1 foot above the basement slab. Video shows inside the bathtub and <br />Mr. Bonza reports “it doesn’t look like we’ve had too much water coming back up <br />backwards there” [backflow through sewer]. <br />Don Cheley / Cheley <br />Colorado Camps, 3960 <br />Fish Creek Road / 303‐ <br />377‐3616 <br />9/19/2013 <br />(site visit) <br />and <br />2/13/2015 <br />(phone call) <br />On 9/19/2013 Mr. Cheley gave an SEO Dam Safety Engineer a tour of extensive <br />flood damage on the Camp Cheley property, located along Fish Creek and an <br />unnamed tributary of Fish Creek that drains the north side of the Twin Sisters <br />Peaks between The Crags and Pierson Park. Damage observed by the DSE included <br />washout of the camp’s main access road at Fish Creek, head cutting erosion at the <br />road crossing the unnamed tributary of Fish Creek, failure of a small irrigation <br />diversion dam and pipeline located west of Sanborn Lake, damage to structures <br />including large boulders and debris deposited inside of a building along the <br />unnamed tributary, and severe channel erosion and debris deposition. <br /> <br />In order to verify the timing of Fish Creek peak flows we contacted Mr. Cheley by <br />phone in early Feb. 2015. We conducted a phone interview with Mr. Cheley on <br />2/13/2015. As would be expected he still had a clear recollection of the flood <br />events. Regarding the timing of flood peaks, he recalled that the rain and runoff <br />began to get heavy in the early morning hours of 9/12/13 (Thursday). At that <br />point, he regarded the rain as a good soaking rain. That morning the camp staff <br />worked to close ditches and other routine tasks to prevent flood damage. They <br />worked in rain gear throughout the morning but generally felt like things were <br />under control. By the afternoon on 9/12/13 that changed and the flood began to <br />do serious damage. Flood flows overwhelmed the camp’s access road culvert and <br />the road overtopped and washed out. Mr. Cheley reported that the flooding <br />broke loose that night sometime after midnight (9/13/13) with the highest flood <br />flows and large amounts of debris. He reports hearing the pounding of debris and <br />boulders moving down the creek overnight. This flood peak and debris is <br />reportedly when one of the camp’s buildings along the unnamed tributary of Fish <br />Creek was filled with boulders and sediment. <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.