Albany Times Union

Closure of major aqueduct delayed for a year

- By Michael Hill

A long-planned temporary shutdown of a leaking aqueduct that supplies about half of New York City’s drinking water will be pushed back a year, giving officials more time to prepare for the monthslong closure.

The city has spent nine years working on a $1 billion bypass tunnel far beneath the Hudson River at Newburgh — about 45 miles north of New York City — to replace a profusely leaking section of the Delaware Aqueduct. Connecting the bypass tunnel will require shutting down the aqueduct for five to eight months, increasing reliance on other water sources.

The shutdown had been planned for this fall.

But the city’s Department of Environmen­tal Protection said Thursday it wants more time to make sure its system can reliably deliver sufficient water from other sources. It also wants to provide extra time for several water supply projects in upstate New York, where many communitie­s depend on the city system.

“We want to make sure that everything is spot on, ready to go,” said Paul Rush, deputy commission­er for the city’s Department of Environmen­tal Protection.

The 85-mile aqueduct is a crucial part of a sprawling water supply system comprising 19 reservoirs, three lakes and connecting tunnels that is sometimes called an engineerin­g feat as impressive as the aqueducts of ancient Rome.

Built mostly during World War II, the Delaware Aqueduct carries about 600 million gallons a day, entirely by gravity, from four Catskill Mountain region reservoirs to a holding reservoir north of the city.

The extra year will ensure that local water infrastruc­ture projects related to the shutdown can be completed in the towns of Newburgh, Wawarsing and Bedford.

The agency wants to start the shutdown in the fall, after the peak demand months of summer have passed.

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