Commenced in May 1956 and completed in May 1958, Eucumbene Dam is a major dam, located approximately northeast of the locality of Eucumbene Cove. The dam was constructed by a consortium comprising the Department of Public Works and Kaiser-Walsh-Perini-Raymond based on engineering plans developed by the United States Bureau of Reclamation and the Department of Public Works, under contract from the Snowy Mountains Hydroelectric Authority. Construction of the dam inundated the original township of Old Adaminaby, which was relocated to Adaminaby in the 1950s, requiring approximately 800 people to be moved. The outer walls of the dam are built of rock while the inner core is compacted, impervious clay. The earthfill embankment dam wall comprising of earth and rockfill is high and long. The foundation of the dam comprises closely jointed hard siltstone and quartzite with overburden of decomposed rock and slope-wash up to deep. A subsidiary embankment containing of fill across a low saddle in a ridge forms the left abutment of the dam wall. At 100% capacity the dam wall, with an elevation of AHD, holds back or of water, approximately equal to nine times the volume of Sydney Harbour. The surface area of Lake Eucumbene is and the catchment area is. The overflow ski-jump and bucket spillway with two vertical lift gates is capable of discharging. The two gates, each wide by high were constructed during 1977-78 under a separate contract.
Lake Eucumbene
Lake Eucumbene is the largest reservoir in the Snowy Mountains Scheme and is the central connection for the northern and southern halves of the Scheme. The Goodradigbee and Murrumbidgee rivers from Tantangara Dam are connected to the Eucumbene River at Lake Eucumbene via the Murrumbidgee-Eucumbene Haupt-tunnel. The Eucumbene River at Lake Eucumbene is connected to the Snowy River at Island Bend Pondage via the long Eucumbene-Snowy Haupt-tunnel; the longest tunnel in the Snowy Mountains Scheme, with a circular diameter of. Also at Lake Eucumbene, the long Eucumbene-Tumut Haupt-tunnel diverts the flow of the Snowy River to the Tumut River, empting into Tumut Pond Reservoir; and into the Murray-Darling basin. This tunnel was constructed between November 1954 and July 1959 and along 28% of its length is lined with a circular diameter. The residual length of the tunnel in unlined and circular in diameter. Construction was through granite and metamorphosed sedimentary rock, involving the excavation of ; and concrete was used to install the pipeline. The valley, which was flooded following construction of the Eucumbene Dam, had been an agricultural centre since the 1830s. A number of homesteads and most of the township of Adaminaby lay within the inundation area of the proposed dam. Most of the buildings in the town relocated to a site on the Snowy Mountains Highway, but some buildings were not flooded and remain at Old Adaminaby. The story of Adaminaby's relocation was the subject of film produced by the Snowy Mountains Authority Film Unit in 1958, entitled Operation Adaminaby. It was also the subject of a 2001 documentary by historian Jeannine Baker, entitled Our Drowned Town, which screened on SBS Television. Entire houses, and even the Commercial Bank building were transported on the back of trucks and over 100 buildings were re-erected at the new townsite. Transportation of the first house from Old Adaminaby to New Adaminaby took six days. Today a tourist village has been built around the handful of buildings which were not relocated from the newly created lakeshore at Old Adaminaby. When the lake is low, remains of the former township and other relics can be seen along the shoreline. For a period of time around 2007, the waters of Lake Eucumbene had receded due to a prolonged drought and Old Adaminaby began to reveal itself after being underwater for over 50 years - gaining the attention of the global media. Of particular interest was the re-emergence of the old 6 Mile Bridge near Anglers Reach on the former highway route to Kiandra.
Climate
Lake Eucumbene yields a cool and wet climate; mild, stormy summers and cold, snowy winters characterise this climate. Frosts occur regularly during autumn, winter and spring, and can occur also in summer. Snowfall can occur at any time of the year, and is especially heavy during winter. This owes to its position on the immediate slopes of the alpine range.
Recreation uses
Lake Eucumbene, at Old Adaminaby and Anglers Reach, is one of the premier trout fishing lakes in New South Wales, stocked with rainbow trout and brown trout present. Camping is permitted in Kosciuszko National Park, with camping sites, powered caravan sites, cabins, villas, etc., provided at several tourist parks around Lake Eucumbene.