Active projects:
Water
-
99th Street Water Treatment Plant Project
LADWP will construct the 99th Street Water Treatment Plant in South Los Angeles to provide chloramine treatment to the groundwater supply distributed by the 99th Street Wells Pumping Station Complex.
-
Fairmont Sedimentation Project
The Fairmont Sedimentation Project would improve raw water quality through a reduction in sediment in the water delivered by the First and Second Los Angeles Aqueducts to the Los Angeles Aqueduct Filtration Plant (LAAFP), where the water receives additional treatment and disinfection before entering the City’s potable water distribution system.
-
Green Verdugo Reservoir Floating Cover Replacement Project
Replacement of the floating cover for Green Verdugo Reservoir is a key capital improvement project and is crucial to maintaining the reservoir’s water quality and supply reliability.
-
Groundwater Remediation
The San Fernando Groundwater Basin (San Fernando Basin [SFB]) provides an important source of groundwater supply for the Cities of Los Angeles, Burbank, and Glendale. The SFB acts as a large, natural underground water reservoir.
-
GSIS Groundwater Monitoring Wells
LADWP completed construction of 25 groundwater monitoring wells in various areas of the easterly portion of the San Fernando Valley. These new wells, along with a network of more than 70 existing wells, are being used to characterize the basin’s groundwater quality and develop a complex of comprehensive groundwater remediation facilities for removing contamination from the city’s major well fields in the San Fernando Basin.
-
Los Angeles Aqueduct Filtration Plant – UV Treatment Plant
A 144-inch diameter pipeline approximately 125 feet long will bring the water into the inlet channel of the UV building with a second similarly sized pipeline delivering the treated water back from the outlet channel into the water distribution network.
-
Lower Franklin Reservoir No. 2 Floating Cover Replacement
The Lower Franklin Reservoir No. 2 (LFR2) is a major storage facility in the LADWP’s drinking water system. This reservoir is covered by an existing floating cover that was installed in 1989 to maintain water quality by minimizing exposure to the environment. The existing floating cover is reaching the end of its service life. Under this project, the existing floating cover will be replaced and additional modifications to the reservoir’s inlet and outlet facilities will be made to improve reservoir circulation, water quality, and operations and maintenance.
-
Mission Wells Chloramination Station Project
Mission Wells Chloramination Station Project will a new facility that will replace the current chlorine system and will provide chloramine disinfection to the groundwater supply distributed by the Mission Wells Facility.
Power
-
Barren Ridge - Haskell Line 1 Upgrade Project Power Infrastructure Upgrade Coming to Kern County
Barren Ridge - Haskell Line 1 Upgrade Project is the final component of the Barren Ridge Renewable Transmission Project, approved in 2012, to access clean, renewable energy resources in the Tehachapi Mountain and Mojave Desert areas of Southern California.
-
Barren Ridge Renewable Transmission
Approved in September of 2012, LADWP is constructing the Barren Ridge Renewable Transmission Project (BRRPT) to access clean, renewable energy resources in the Tehachbapi Mountain and Mojave Desert areas of Southern California.
-
Franklin-Argyle Underground Power Transmission Project
The Franklin-Argyle Underground Power Transmission Project is an urgent project necessary to repair underground power lines and equipment near the intersection of Franklin Ave. and Argyle Ave. in Hollywood.
-
McCullough-Victorville Transmission Lines 1 and 2
McCullough-Victorville (MCC-VIC) Transmission Lines 1 and 2 are two existing 500 kilovolt (kV) electrical power lines supported on approximately 1,740 single-circuit towers, and spanning over 160 miles from McCullough Switching Station in Nevada, through several mountain ranges, into the Mojave Desert and ending at the Victorville Switching Station in California. This will increase LADWP’s share of transmission capacity on West of River (WOR) Path 46.
-
-
Sylmar Ground Return System Replacement Project
LADWP is continually assessing the existing electric grid to provide reliable power to residents and businesses in the city. A key feature of the grid is a high-voltage direct current transmission system, known as the Pacific Direct Current Intertie (PDCI), which transmits bulk power between the Pacific Northwest and the Los Angeles area.