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The Martin Dam was constructed on an active farm in 1961 as part of USDA’s sustainable farms pond construction initiative. Martin Dam’s robust 4,000 cubic yards of placed dam material resulted in the impoundment of only 3.5 acres of surface water. Several years ago, during the removal of a beaver dam that was obstructing the dam outlet, the riser structure was inadvertently destroyed, and a large part of the earthen dam collapsed. Due to the damage, the dam was put under an enforcement action from the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) Dam Safety Program. Site investigations showed an outlet culvert in total disrepair and severe erosion of the dam and downstream areas.
Fearing the risk to property and life from a catastrophic dam failure, GreenTrust Alliance, in partnership with Princeton Hydro, were enlisted to design, develop, and enact an emergency dam breach. The earthen dam was approximately 20 feet in height and 490 feet in length, with an impoundment of approximately 3.48 acres. The contributing drainage area was approximately 0.25 square miles (160 acres) of low density residential land use and the primary inflowing channel, Overshot Branch, was intermittent or ephemeral. The assessment and design involved probing within the impoundment, which revealed water depths averaging 4.7 feet, with a maximum of 7.5 feet, and impounded sediment depths averaging 1.0 foot, with a maximum of 3.0 feet.
Princeton Hydro prepared a 35% design plan for the earthen dam removal, and this plan was subsequently approved by MDE Dam Safety with an emergency permit, forgoing the typical months-long design and review process. The dam breach was implemented in late 2018.
After the dam breach, Princeton Hydro completed a hydrologic and hydraulic assessment. Pre- and post-breach conditions were modeled to determine the potential increase in flood elevations to downstream properties. In addition, a dam failure was also modeled to assess the potential risks should the dam have failed. In comparing the pre-and post-breach scenarios, 100-year flood elevations increased between 0.01 and 0.29 feet for approximately 1 mile downstream of the pond. The floodplain valley for this stream was relatively narrow which means any increases in discharge translated to larger increases on peak flood elevations compared to the total width of the floodplain. However, the narrow floodplain also acted a barrier, ensuring that flooding was mostly contained to the area around the stream itself. No additional structures were inundated as a result of the breach.
Princeton Hydro, along with GreenVest and Green Trust Alliance, developed a design that enhanced in-stream habitat of the downstream reach, and allowed for passive wetland conversion and restoration of the former impoundment.
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