The method of
dam construction invented by Otto Intze was used in Germany at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. A dam built on the Intze Principle has the following features: • it is a
gravity dam with an almost triangular cross-section • the wall is made of
rubble stone with a high proportion of mortar • it has a curved ground plan • it has facing brickwork (
Vorsatzmauerwerk or
Verblendung) on the upper part of the upstream side • it has an earth embankment against the lower part of the upstream side, the so-called Intze Wedge (
Intze-Keil) • it has a cement-sealed upstream face, coated with a layer of
bitumen or
tar • it has internal vertical
drainage using clay pipes behind the upstream face The purpose of the Intze Wedge is to provide an additional seal in the area of the highest water pressure. During the 1920s, this type of construction was gradually superseded by concrete dams or arched dams which were cheaper to build. == See also ==