Water treatment program background
Aqueduct
Since Shoal Lake is higher than Winnipeg, water flows downhill through the aqueduct. The aqueduct is a large concrete pipe that was built to carry the water. Construction started in 1915 and was completed in 1919. It cost 17 million dollars at the time and can carry 386 million litres, or 85 million gallons, of water per day.
Deacon Reservoir
Before it is treated, water from Shoal Lake is stored in Deacon Reservoir. The reservoir is on the east side of the Winnipeg floodway, a few kilometres south of highway 15. The reservoir was named after Thomas R. Deacon, the mayor of Winnipeg in 1913 who promoted the Shoal Lake project.
Water is stored at Deacon Reservoir to handle peak summer demands for water and to allow brief shutdowns of the aqueduct for maintenance. The four large outdoor reservoirs hold up to 8.8 billion litres (1.9 billion gallons) of water - enough to supply Winnipeg for about 30 days. Powerful pumps move the water from the reservoirs into the plant for treatment.
Treatment plant background
The new water treatment plant has been built at the Deacon Reservoir site. We examined several possible sites for the plant:
- Shoal Lake
- upstream of Deacon, and
- downstream of Deacon, near MacLean Reservoir.
The Deacon site is best because:
- the original plan for the aqueduct included a future plant at Deacon
- the infrastructure is in place
- it is the most economical and reliable location for the plant
Funding
- A Water Treatment Reserve Fund was set up in 1993 to save money for the water treatment program.
- The Reserve, funded through water rates from 1993 to 2007, contributed $133 million towards the total program.
- The remaining portion is financed through long-term debt.
Timeline
Dec. 9, 2009 | The plant begins sending treated water to the city. | |
Late 2009 | Water treatment plant construction finishes. | |
May 2006 | Ultraviolet light (UV) disinfection begins operating. | |
Spring 2005 | Building the water treatment plant starts. | |
March 2005 | Preliminary design and environmental effects study is finished. | |
Dec. 2004 | Installation of ultraviolet light disinfection system is finished. |
Pre-Dec. 2004 | A number of water treatment technologies are tested and the combination that works best for Winnipeg's water is found. An initial design for the water treatment plant is prepared and experts are hired to prepare the final design and oversee the building of the plant. |
Nov. 2000 | City Council approves a water treatment program to:
|
Background water treatment plant reports
- Winnipeg's water - Our most essential resource
(pdf - 654kb)
(pdf - 613kb) - Should Winnipeg build a water treatment plant
(pdf - 340kb)
(pdf - 47kb) - Assessing the need to treat Winnipeg's water supply
(pdf - 600kb) - Water treatment for the City's water supply
(pdf - 312kb) - Water treatment for the City's water supply
- Phase III
(pdf - 335kb)
- Drinking water quality enhancement program
- Executive summary and summary report
(pdf - 439kb) - Drinking water quality enhancement program
- Phase III conceptual design report (June 2002)
(pdf - 2.95MB)
Due to security and safety concerns, tours of this facility are not available.
A virtual tour of our drinking water treatment plant is available.