Construction on $14 million Austin dam expected to start in fall 2024

February 2, 2024

Austin is proceeding with a $14 million project to modernize the Old Lampasas Dam, according to a recent update by city officials. The project to ensure the safety of nearby residents and improve water quality is currently in the permitting phase, with construction expected in the fall of 2024. The city will ask contractors to submit bids in the spring.

Built in 1984, the facility safeguards nearly 30 structures and two roads downstream from the dam on a Bull Creek tributary. Tropical Storm Hermine damaged the dam’s primary outlet pipe in 2010. That, in combination with “poor construction” materials has resulted in erosion and the formation of “numerous holes” on the upstream slope of the dam, described by the city as “unsafe.” 

Construction plans include replacing the existing 60-incue diameter spillway with a 42-inch diameter pipe and installing a new intake structure and low flow riser upstream of the dam. The project also calls for installation of a new Flood Early Warning System and replacing the existing wastewater line upstream of the dam’s centerline.

The scope of the project also includes installing a concrete headwall for the principal spillway, armoring of the existing plunge pool, building an auxiliary spillway and a new maintenance drive to give the city of Austin employees access to maintain the dam. Plans call for removing existing trees and boulders on the dam’s footprint, grading and resurfacing of embankment slopes and raising the dam to contain a worst-case scenario flood.


Strategic Partnerships, Inc. can provide information on contract opportunities, plus existing and future government funding. For more information, contact research@spartnerships.com.


Paul Stinson

Paul Stinson has more than 15 years of journalism experience, including a decade covering the legislative and regulatory affairs of Texas, South Africa, and Germany for an affiliate of Bloomberg, L.P. His experience includes covering voting rights and the sectors of environment, energy, labor, healthcare, and taxes. Stinson joined the team in October as a reporter for SPI’s news publications, which include Government Contracting Pipeline, Texas Government Insider, and the newly-launched Government Market News. He is also a Fulbright Scholar to Germany, and an Arthur F. Burns Fellow. He holds a master’s in journalism from Indiana University.   

Don't Miss

Massive support, funding now available to improve supply-chain networks

New opportunities for multimodal freight, rail, and port projects are
A hospital hallway.

New hospitals greenlit for Amarillo, Wichita Falls

The Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) is searching