The Charles River Dam was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The structure also includes the "Colonel Richard Gridley Locks", named for General George Washington's first army engineer. Built and operational in 1978, the three locks can be crossed by pedestrians. It is part of the popular
Boston Harborwalk. The dam contains three individual
locks, with one wider than the other two to accommodate the occasional passing of a larger vessel. The structure also includes a
fish passage. Six diesel-powered, 2700 horsepower turbo-charged engines drive six pumps with a combined capacity of about per minute or 8140 cubic feet per second (CFS). The dam controls the surface level of the river basin as well its tributaries upstream, including the
Back Bay Fens and
Muddy River and to prevent
sea water from entering the Charles River freshwater basin during high tides. It replaced the
1910 Charles River Dam upstream, now the site of the
Boston Museum of Science . The 1910 dam includes two locks (one under the Science Museum parking garage). Both locks are now kept open for navigation. The older dam could not keep sea water out and a layer of salt water accumulated at the bottom of the fresh water basin, contributing to pollution and fish migration problems. on the Charles River Dam. The dam's walkway is the site of the "Charlestown Bells", an interactive art installation by
Paul Matisse, consisting of a set of chimes mounted on the railing that passers-by can strike. The work was refurbished in 2013 after it had fallen into disrepair. The Charles River Dam was once in the shadow of the former
Charlestown High Bridge located upstream. It was replaced by the Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge just upstream. ==References==