Llyn Eigiau is a lake on the edge of the
Carneddau range of mountains in
Snowdonia
Snowdonia, or Eryri (), is a mountainous region and National parks of the United Kingdom, national park in North Wales. It contains all 15 mountains in Wales Welsh 3000s, over 3000 feet high, including the country's highest, Snowdon (), which i ...
,
Conwy, Wales. The name ''Eigiau'' is thought to refer to the shoals of fish which once lived here. Early maps refer to it as ''Llynyga''. It is thought that a small number of
Arctic char exist in the lake (as they do in neighbouring
Llyn Cowlyd) after they were transferred here from
Llyn Peris, and certainly it is one of the few lakes in Wales to have its own natural
brown trout. The lake is surrounded by mountains including
Pen Llithrig y Wrach.
Dam
In 1911 a dam ¾ mile long and high was built across part of its eastern side to supply water for the power station at
Dolgarrog, which in turn provided power for the adjacent
aluminium
Aluminium (or aluminum in North American English) is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol Al and atomic number 13. It has a density lower than that of other common metals, about one-third that of steel. Aluminium has ...
works. Materials for the dam were transported along the newly laid
Eigiau Tramway, which ran from Dolgarrog and utilized the route of the former
Cedryn Quarry Tramway. The original contractor pulled out of the construction, alleging corner-cutting, and indeed on 2 November 1925, following of rain in just five days, the dam broke. The water flowed down to
Coedty Reservoir, also causing that to burst, and millions of gallons of water flowed down into the village of
Dolgarrog, causing the loss of 16 lives. A new power station was built at Dolgarrog in 1925. Three short black and white silent films of the incident exist.
A study of the dam today shows that the foundations were insufficient, and large lumps of unmixed cement can also be seen. The dam material that can be seen through existing holes is flaky and tends to break away easily.
Present-day
Today the lake covers an area of about , and has a depth of about . After the construction of the dam its area would have been twice this.
Water is fed into Llyn Eigiau by a tunnel from the stream below
Llyn Dulyn, and another larger tunnel takes water from Llyn Eigiau to
Llyn Cowlyd. The main feeder of Llyn Eigiau is
Afon Eigiau, a small river which flows down Cwm Eigiau. The outflow from Llyn Eigiau is called
Afon Porth-llwyd, and this flows via
Coedty reservoir before passing under Pont Newydd in Dolgarrog. This then flows into the
River Conwy.
Access
Although private vehicles are not permitted access to the lake itself, there is a carpark within walking distance, approx. half a mile from the dam and which is reached by road from the
B5106 at
Tal-y-bont, in the
Conwy valley. The road passes through
Llanbedr-y-Cennin and thereafter becomes a narrow lane as it goes over the hills towards the lake. Along this lane there are some public footpaths signposted, with stiles to access them over the old dry-stone walls that run along parts of the lane.
Bibliography
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References
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Caerhun
Eigiau
Eigiau
Dam failures in Europe