Lake Austin Real Estate ~ Lake Austin Waterfront Homes

Specializing in selling the best Lake Austin properities and homes in Austin Texas.  Call on Lori Wakefield the Lake Austin Real Estate Expert ~ Austin, Lake Travis, Lakeway, Waterfront Real Estate ~ Search Lake Austin Homes for Sale and More!

Lake Austin Real Estate

Lake Austin property is among the most sought after real estate in the greater Austin area.  .

Search All Lake Austin Homes for Sale Now

History of Lake Austin

Lake Austin, formerly Lake McDonald, is an artificial lake in the western part of Austin on the Colorado River in west central Travis County.  Lake mcDonald, the first large reservoir in Texas, was formed by the construction Austin Dam, which was begun in 1890 and completed in 1893.  Because there were no other major obstructions of the Colorado River at that time, the Austin Dam trapped large amounts of sediment that washed downstream.  Gradually, the pressure caused the dam to slide and in 1900 it gave way during a heavy rainstorm, cuasing extensive flooding.  The dam was partially rebuilt in 1915, but construction was abandoned because of a dispute between the contracotr and the city of Austin.  High waters destroyed the unfinished dam later that year.  In 1938 the city of Austin gave a contract to the Lower Colorado River Authority to build a new dam.  Tom Miller Dam, a concrete pier and slab structure 1,590 feet long was completed in 1939.

Lake Austin, one of six LCRA projects on the Colorado Rive, is immediately downstream from Lake Travis, which supplies water to Lake Austin for constant-level reservoir operation.  Lake Austin reservoir has a capacity of 21,000 acre-feet with a surface area of 1,830 acres at an uncontrolled spillway crest elevataion of 492.8 feet above sea level.  It is operated at a practically constant level, since electrical generation is coordinated with the turbine discharge at the marshall Ford power plant at Mansfield Dam, twenty-one miels upstream.  There are two generators with all necessary auxiliaries in the powerhouse at Tom Miller Dam, each with a capacity of 6,750 kilowatts.  The electrical power can be delivered directly to the city of Austin's distribuiton center or to the LCRA's interconnected transmission system.  The drainage area above the dam is approximately 38,240 square miles, of which 11,900 square miles is probably noncontribuitn.  The lake provides opportunity for a variet of recreational activies, including camping and water sports, and has attracted several development projects in the form of lake houses and subdivisions.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:  C.L. Dowell, Dams and Reservoirs in Texas: History and Descriptive Information (Texas Water Commission Bulletin 6408 {Austin,1964}). David C Humphrey, Austin:An Illustrated History (Northridge,California:Windsor,1985). Richard Zelade, Austin (Austin:Texas Monthly Press,1984)

 

Lake Austin Neigbhorhoods

under construction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contact Us

* Indicates a Required Field.

Please provide a valid email address.