City Storage and Delivery
Greeley's extensive water storage system holds nearly 52 million gallons of potable water in different areas throughout the city. Four covered reservoirs and one elevated tank store the water.
Greeley’s City Storage and Distribution System:
- Can store 52 million gallons of water
- 4 treated water (storage) reservoirs: 23rd Avenue, Mosier Hill, and Gold Hill Reservoirs (holding from 2 million to 15 million gallons)
- 1 Gold Hill Elevated Tank (water tower holds 2 million gallons)
- 489 miles of pipelines (ranging from 4 to 36 inches in diameter with some over a century old)
- 28,902 water meters
- 3,642 fire hydrants
The distribution pipes range in size from 4-36 inches in diameter. Some are over a century old while others were recently installed. The underground storage reservoirs also vary in size.
- 23rd Avenue—One 15-million-gallon concrete reservoir
- Mosier Hill—One 15-million-gallon concrete reservoir
- Gold Hill has three reservoirs
- One 15-million-gallon underground concrete reservoir
- One 5-million-gallon partially buried concrete reservoir
- One 2-million-gallon concrete and steel water tower
Water Meters:
Greeley was among the first cities on the Front Range to have all accounts fully metered (by 1996) and to use computer technology to read them. All single-family houses and businesses in Greeley must have a water meter, and multi-family units a master meter.
The meters help the city determine how much water is used to bill customers properly. If there is an irregularity in the customer's water usage, the billing department will work with the Meter Shop to investigate and resolve the problem.
Learn More About Installing or Updating Your Meter
Fire Hydrants:
While the Fire Department is one obvious user of them, fire hydrants serve many other important purposes. Greeley's Water and Sewer Department installs and maintains the hydrants, painting about one-third of the fire hydrants each year. In addition to providing water to help put out fires, they are used to:
- Flush and clean water mains
- Flush sewers
- Fill tank trucks for street washing, tree spraying and winter watering
- Temporary water for construction jobs, such as for mixing mortar and settling dust
It is prohibited to paint fire hydrants or place bushes around them. There must be a 4-foot buffer area around hydrants, so they are easy to maintain and find in an emergency.