The Santa Cruz River through Tucsonâs south side and downtown is dry again â temporarily.
Tucson Water shut down releases this week for the Santa Cruz River Heritage Project for up to three weeks, to install mechanical upgrades for the equipment used to put reclaimed water into the river.
The water utility is installing a new pressure release valve near the point where water is released into the river north of 29th Street.
Thatâs because as the water release system was configured, whenever the city wanted to reduce flows for any reason, the change in water pressure would cause cavitation to the pipes, which can damage them.
The utility will also move a device used to dechlorinate the reclaimed water, again to a spot near the effluent release point, said Tucson Water spokesman Fernando Molina.
That will make it easier and more efficient to restart the system after itâs been shut down, Molina said.
The effluent is always dechlorinated before itâs released into the river channel.
The Heritage Project has been releasing the reclaimed water since June 24, in order to restore some of the riparian habitat that disappeared after groundwater pumping dried up the river in the 1940s and â50s.
The project will also allow the city to recharge the effluent in a place where the water will be more easy to recover from the aquifer in the future.
Until the releases started, this effluent was dumped into the river at Pima Countyâs Agua Nueva wastewater treatment plant, where it traveled far downstream of where the cityâs wells lie.
30+ historic photos of the Santa Cruz River through Tucson
Waterfalls on the Santa Cruz River in 1889 near Sentinel Peak in Tucson.
Girls in Santa Cruz River,1889-1890.
A bridge over the Santa Cruz River near Sentinel Peak in Tucson washed out during flooding in 1915.
Santa Cruz River at St. Mary's Road bridge in 1931.
The Santa Cruz River flows north as seen from Sentinel Peak in Tucson in the early 1900's.
El Convento along the Santa Cruz River, ca. 1910.
Flooding of the Santa Cruz River, Tucson, in September, 1926, from âLetters from Tucson, 1925-1927â by Ethel Stiffler.
Flooding of the Santa Cruz River, Tucson, in September, 1926, from âLetters from Tucson, 1925-1927â by Ethel Stiffler.
Aerial view of the Santa Cruz River as it winds its way through Pima County north of Cortaro Road in 1953. The county was considering a bridge at several locations, but had to contend with the ever-changing course of the river.
The Tucson Citizen wrote in 1970, "The Santa Cruz River is a garbage dump" and "even marijuana grows in it." City leaders were pushing to upgrade and beautify the channel. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was studying the possibility.
The Santa Cruz River flowing under the Congress Street bridge in August, 1952. The Garden of Gesthemane is in the background.
By July 24, 1970 the old bridge on West Congress over the Santa Cruz River had to go and be replaced by a new bridge.
By July 24, 1970 the figures from Felix Lucero's Last Supper had been on the west side of the Santa Cruz River for more than 20 years. City authorities had decided to leave it in place while a new bridge on West Congress Street was to be replaced.
Volunteers from the Tucson Jaycees and Junior Chamber of Commerce finish restoration of the statues and grounds of the Garden of Gethsemane along the Santa Cruz River in May, 1964. The statues were ravaged by vandals and weather. The city parks and recreation department worked with the volunteers. Artist Felix Lucero began sculpture project in 1938 and finished it nine years later.
Drought in June, 1974, turned the Santa Cruz riverbed into crunchy chunks of dried mud.
The Santa Cruz River flowing under Silverlake Road in August, 1970.
Children play in the Santa Cruz River near Speedway Blvd in August, 1970.
The Santa Cruz riverbed at Congress Street in November, 1967.
After years of waiting, crews began clearing debris and channeling the Santa Cruz River in November, 1977, and constructing what would become a 14-mile river park. The Speedway Blvd. bridge is in the background.
After years of waiting, crews began clearing debris and channeling the Santa Cruz River in November, 1977, and constructing what would become a 14-mile river park.
The Santa Cruz River looks peaceful flowing underneath Speedway Road after days of flooding in October, 1977.
Adalberto Ballesteros rides along the Santa Cruz River west of downtown Tucson in 1980.
The Santa Cruz River looking north from Valencia Road in July, 1974.
Junked cars and trash spill into the Santa Cruz River, looking south, just south of Grant Road in July, 1974.
Road graders scrape the Santa Cruz River channel between Speedway and Grant roads during bank stabilization construction in May, 1991.
Water surges in the Santa Cruz River at the St. Maryâs Road bridge on Oct. 2, 1983.
Flooding in Marana after the Santa Cruz River overflowed its banks in Oct. 1983.
A bridge on the Santa Cruz River northwest of Tucson washed out during flooding in October 1983.
Residents watch the surging Santa Cruz River rush past West St. Mary's Road on January 19, 1993.Â
Tucson firefighters are standing by and waiting for two kids floating in the Santa Cruz River on some type of object during flooding in July, 1996.
As the Tucson Modern Streetcar rumbles across the Luis G. Gutierrez Bridge, water flows bank to bank along the Santa Cruz River after a morning monsoon storm on July 15, 2014.
Johnny Dearmore skips a rock in the Santa Cruz River as reclaimed water is released into the channel at 29th Street as part of the Santa Cruz River Heritage Project on June 24, 2019. The release of effluent is the cityâs first effort to restore a fraction of the riverâs flow since groundwater pumping dried it up in the 1940s.
The Santa Cruz River flows Friday morning July 23, 2021 after an overnight monsoon storm passed over in Tucson, Ariz.
Betsy Grube, center, with Arizona Game and Fish Department, releases longfin dace fish into the Santa Cruz River at Starr Pass Boulevard on March 23, 2022, as Mark Hart, right, takes a video and Michael Bogan, a professor in aquatic ecology at the University of Arizona, picks up more fish to release. The 600 fish were captured from Cienega Creek in Vail.



