Lake of Gruyère
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lake of Gruyère Lac de la Gruyère |
|
---|---|
|
|
Coordinates | |
Lake type | reservoir |
Primary inflows | Saane/Sarine, Sionge, Jogne |
Primary outflows | Saane/Sarine |
Catchment area | 954 km² |
Basin countries | Switzerland |
Max. length | 13.5 km |
Surface area | 9.60 km² |
Max. depth | 75 m |
Water volume | 220,000,000 m³ |
Surface elevation | 677 m (max) |
Islands | Ile d'Ogoz (islet) |
Settlements | see article |
Lake of Gruyère (French: Lac de la Gruyère; German: Lac de la Gruyère or Greyerzersee) is a lake in the La Gruyère region of the Canton of Fribourg, Switzerland.
The reservoir was formed between the cities of Bulle and Fribourg, by building the Rossens Dam on the Sarine river in 1948. The arch dam has a height of 83 m and a crest length of 320 m. The reservoir filled in about four months after completion. The dam is operated by the Groupe E SA.
The remains of the castle of Pont (or Pont-en-Ogoz) and a chapel are located on the Ile d'Ogoz, an islet in the lake.
The "Viaduc du Lac de Gruyère" of the A12 motorway was built in the 1970s. The bridge has a total length of 2043 m and crosses three valleys, including two arms of the lake.
Etang de la Gruyère is located in the canton of Jura.
Western shore | Eastern shore |
---|---|
|
[edit] External links
- Christophe Aeby: Lac de la Gruyère in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
- Swissdams: Rossens
- Rossens Dam in the Structurae database
- Viaduc du Lac de Gruyère in the Structurae database
- Swisscastles: Ogoz