Events Calendar

Download as iCal file
Baldwin Water Treatment Plant
Thursday 13 August 2015, 11:00am - 01:00pm
Hits : 756
by This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Day Site Visit: Baldwin Water Treatment Plant 8/13/15 at 11:00 AM.  

Attendees will need to check in at Security (bring Driver’s License to show Security Officer) at main Security Station off of Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. Parking is available just to the right of the Filter Building (main Building and entrance). Personnel will be staged at front entrance to Filter Building to direct visitors to meeting room. Address:

11216 Stokes Blvd

Cleveland, OH 44104

The Baldwin Water Treatment Plant is located in the University Circle/Fairfax neighborhood. Launched in 1924, the plant operates four additional facilities– the Kirtland Pump Station (1968), the Fairmount Pump Station (1923), the Fairmount Residuals Handling facility (1987) and the Baldwin Filter Plant (1924). The plant has a reservoir with a capacity of 130 million gallons (MGD) and was once considered the largest potable water reservoir in the world. On average, it pumps 71.1 million gallons of water a day to the residents and businesses located in downtown, University Circle, east side of Cleveland and the eastern and southeastern suburbs. It is interesting to note that due to the elevation and storage capacity of the Baldwin Reservoir, none of the communities below the elevation of the reservoir lost water supply during the great blackout of 2003.  

Baldwin recently underwent $156,000,000 in major renovations as part of Cleveland Water's Plant Enhancement Program.  Some of the key upgrades included: the installation of a computer control system allowing the Plant Manager to unman the pump stations; the installation of two new Second High Service pumps at Fairmount; the replacement of two 55 MGD pumps at Kirtland with a 10 and 20 MGD pump to allow a wider range of pump flows; and the addition of a de-chlorination system to treat water from the finished water reservoir underdrains.

Baldwin is the only plant, out of all four, that has a visible raw water intake crib on the lake. Normally referred to as the 5-mile crib, this intake is about 3.5 miles from the Cleveland shoreline but 5 miles from the Kirtland Pump Station