Kowloon Reservoir

Reservoir in New Territories, Hong Kong From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kowloon Reservoir, part of the Kowloon Group of Reservoirs, is a reservoir in Sha Tin District, Hong Kong, located within the Kam Shan Country Park. The total water storage capacity is 353 million gallons and the total cost of construction was $619,000.[1]

Coordinates22°21′14″N 114°09′12″E
Built1906; 120 years ago (1906)
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
Kowloon Reservoir
Kowloon Reservoir viewed from the main dam
Kowloon Reservoir is located in Hong Kong
Kowloon Reservoir
Kowloon Reservoir
LocationKam Shan Country Park, Sha Tin, New Territories, Hong Kong
Coordinates22°21′14″N 114°09′12″E
Lake typereservoir
Built1906; 120 years ago (1906)
Water volume1,578,000 cubic metres (55,700,000 cu ft)
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TraditionalChinese九龍水塘
SimplifiedChinese九龙水塘
Literal meaningNine Dragons Reservoir
Hanyu PinyinJiǔ lóng shuǐ táng
Quick facts Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese ...
Kowloon Reservoir
Traditional Chinese九龍水塘
Simplified Chinese九龙水塘
Literal meaningNine Dragons Reservoir
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJiǔ lóng shuǐ táng
Hakka
RomanizationGeo2 Lung4 Sêü2 Tong4
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationGáu lùhng séui tòhng
JyutpingGau2 lung4 seoi2 tong4
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History

Establishment

In 1898, the British took over the New Territories and New Kowloon and the Public Works Department immediately sent engineering teams to explore water sources. However, the team found suitable valleys to build reservoirs in the west of Beacon Hill and south of Needle Hill. Construction for Kowloon Reservoir commenced in 1901 and it was completed in 1910, making it the first reservoir in the New Territories.[2]

Further expansion

Expansion of the Kowloon Reservoir began in 1922. It aimed to expand the filtration plant in order to have a daily output of 3.58 million gallons of water; enlarge the catchment area; and improve the dams’ walls. After the expansion, the Kowloon Reservoir provided 1.5 million gallons of water to the locals daily.[3]

Effect on locals

The completion of the Kowloon Reservoir reduced the locals’ dependence on getting water from wells. The locals got water from the reservoir. This led to the decline of the Yau Ma Tei Pumping Station.[3]

See also

References

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