The Leslie Harrison Dam is an earth-fill embankment dam across the Tingalpa Creek, located in the South East region of Queensland, Australia. The main purpose of the dam is for potable water supply of the Redland City in Brisbane. The impounded reservoir is called Tingalpa Reservoir.
The dam was named after Robert Leslie Harrison, a Queensland parliamentarian who died in April 1966.
The dam is located between the suburbs of Capalaba, Chandler and Burbank, approximately southeast of Brisbane. The primary inflow of the reservoir is the Tingalpa Creek, not far above its mouth at Waterloo Bay. The dam is one of a number of dams connected to the South East Queensland Water Grid, and the dam provides approximately 20% of the water supply for Redland City.
Completed in 1968, the earthfill dam structure is high and long. The resultant Tingalpa Reservoir has capacity of when full, drawn from a catchment area of that includes much of the northern slopes of the Venman Bushland National Park. The dam reservoir surface area covers . Controlled vertical lift gates were added to the spillway in 1984 to increase water supply to the region, and removed in 2014 to improve dam safety. The spillway has a discharge capacity of .
Initially managed by the Redland City Council, management of the dam was transferred to SEQ Water in July 2008 as part of a water security project in the South East Queensland region, known as the South East Queensland Water Grid.
In 1984, the dam wall was raised and gates were installed, and in 2014, work began on improving the safety of the dam after SEQ Water completed a major investigation of its operating dams, which included draining the dam to approximately 50% capacity.
In 2012âÂÂ13, an independent review of SEQ Water's 26 referable dams found improvements were needed at a number of dams, including Leslie Harrison, to meet the revised Queensland Dam Safety Guidelines. The detailed design for the upgrade of Leslie Harrison Dam was completed and included widening and strengthening the dam wall, anchoring the spillway, improving resilience to extreme weather events and earthquakes, and not returning the gates to the spillway.
There are no plans to introduce recreation on the Tingalpa Reservoir. In 2014, SEQ Water engaged experts to conduct a water quality study and develop a screening tool to improve understanding of the impact recreation has on water quality in drinking water lakes. The complex and comprehensive study was completed in 2016 and, using a screening tool, determined that given the reservoir's role as a drinking water source for the Redlands, recreation cannot be considered because of unacceptable risks to water quality.