Muddy Run

When the Muddy Run pumped storage project opened in 1968 it was the largest pumped storage project in the world. The eight pump/turbines in the powerhouse generate a total of 1,072 megawatts. The upper reservoir is a rambling 1,000-acre lake, 400 feet above the elevation of the river. The lower reservoir, where the powerhouse is located, is a flooded section of the Susquehanna formed by the Conowingo Dam, the last dam on the river before it enters Chesapeake Bay. This section of river also serves as the cooling water for the Peach Bottom Nuclear Power Plant, one of the first commercial nuclear plants in the nation. Muddy Run was built to absorb the excess power produced by the nuclear power plant at night, when demand for electricity decreases, returning it to the grid during the day. Both facilities are owned by Constellation Energy, one of the largest power companies in the USA.



image from pumped storage exhibit

The plant is accessed by a service road that passes through a tunnel under a railroad track.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

Each turbine in the plant generates 134 megawatts, giving the plant a total output capacity of 1,072 megawatts.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

One of the runners, the spinning portion of the pump/turbine, is on display outside the plant.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

The intake towers connect to four 25-foot diameter shafts that bifurcate underground to connect to the eight pump/turbines in the plant.
Google Earth image


image from pumped storage exhibit

The reservoir has a lobe with a canal that brings water to four intakes above the plant.
CLUI photo


image from pumped storage exhibit

Some of the shore of the upper reservoir is a recreational park, operated by Constellation Energy, the utility which owns Muddy Run, and the Peach Bottom plant.
CLUI photo