Ludington

The Ludington Pumped Storage Plant is the second largest pumped storage plant in the USA. It is located in the town of Ludington, on Lake Michigan. The plant pumps water out of the lake, 360 feet up to a reservoir built on a bluff above the shore. The reservoir is two miles long, 110 feet deep, and holds 25 billion gallons of water. When water is allowed to flow back down to the powerhouse, the water level drops almost 70 feet over several hours, and the powerhouse’s six reversible pump/turbines generate up to 2,322 megawatts, enough electricity for a city of 1.6 million people. For a few hours, at least. It helps stabilize the electrical grid in the upper Midwest, which is heavily dependent on nuclear plants (five of them are along the shores of Lake Michigan itself). When it opened in 1973, after four years of construction, it was the largest pumped storage plant in the world.



image from pumped storage exhibit

Its upper reservoir was built on a bluff above the shore, and its shape was determined by minimizing the amount of earth moving required, based on the existing contours.
base map: Google Earth


image from pumped storage exhibit

The Ludington Pumped Storage Plant is the second largest pumped storage plant in the USA. It is located in the town of Ludington, on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, which it uses as its lower reservoir.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

A runner from one of six turbines in the plant is on display nearby. It was in use from the plant’s opening in 1973, to 2019, when the plant was overhauled.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

The rugged yet airy main display has four panels, using cross-sectional diagrams, photos, and maps.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

Levels in Lake Michigan, 360 feet below, are unaffected.
CLUI photo