Cabin Creek

Cabin Creek is one of two major pumped storage projects in Colorado. It is located in a steep valley south of Georgetown, at an elevation of more than 10,000 feet. It consists of similarly sized upper and lower reservoirs, separated by 1,192 feet of elevation, and a power plant on the shore of the lower reservoir. Water goes up and down between the reservoirs through a 3/4-mile-long underground tunnel, and through two reversible pump turbines, capable of generating 324 megawatts between them. The plant opened in 1967, and is owned by Xcel Energy, a large regional utility company that operates facilities in the Midwest and west, including a dozen coal-fired plants and two nuclear plants. The plant might be best known for a tragic industrial accident in 2007. Workers were doing repairs inside the main tunnel, spraying epoxy sealant on the walls, when volatile solvents caught fire. With limited egress along the 4,125-foot-long underground tube, some workers were trapped inside. Five of them died.



image from pumped storage exhibit

Cabin Creek consists of similarly sized upper and lower reservoirs, separated by 1,192 feet of elevation, and a power plant on the shore of the lower reservoir.
base map: Google Earth


image from pumped storage exhibit

Water goes up and down between the reservoirs through a 3/4-mile-long underground tunnel, and through two reversible pump turbines, capable of generating 324 megawatts between them.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

The plant opened in 1967, and is owned by Xcel Energy, a large regional utility company that operates facilities in the Midwest and West, including a dozen coal-fired plants and two nuclear plants.
CLUI photo