Rarely seen dam in Central Park Reservoir exposed amid historic drought

Anyone up for a walk across the Central Park Reservoir?

A rarely-seen divider that stretches across the center of the Manhattan watering hole was exposed this week as the city grapples with a historic rain shortage and drought.

Dozens of birds were seen resting across the stone wall Thursday afternoon, taking advantage of a weir that is typically submerged beneath the Jaqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir.

The dividing weir across Central Park was visible amid the city’s drought warning this week. Katherine Donlevy / NY Post

The reservoir is filled with water from upstate reservoirs, which have also dropped below typical thresholds in recent days. Katherine Donlevy / NY Post

The sudden appearance isn’t the first time the dividing wall — a holdover from the reservoir’s days as New York City’s drinking source — has popped above water level, but it marks the first time it has emerged due to extreme weather.

“The dividing weir has been visible from time to time over the last several years, typically when there is capital construction or repair work to be done on the reservoir,” Ted Timbers of the city Department of Protection, told The Post.

The DEP said that the reservoir has lost enough water to drop two feet from its normal level in recent weeks, as a drought warning hovers over the Big Apple for the first time in 22 years.

The weir is a holdover from when the reservoir served as a New York City drinking water source. Katherine Donlevy / NY Post

The 106-acre and roughly 40-foot deep reservoir — which typically holds more than one billion gallons of water — is supplied from upstate reservoirs, which have dropped below their own normal thresholds.

“The Central Park Reservoir is no longer a part of the city’s drinking water supply system,” said Timbers.

“However, when it was a part of the system it functioned with two basins, one on either side of the dividing weir, which is now visible. So what you are seeing now is actually how the reservoir historically looked, and how it was designed to look.”

The reservoir, named for the former First Lady, was decommissioned in 1993 in part because of algae contamination concerns, as well as the upstate New York aqueduct expansion, according to the Central Park Conservancy.

The weir is typically only revealed during construction or repairs on the reservoir. Paul Martinka

A significant swath of rainfall is expected to hit the Big Apple Thursday and Friday, raising hope for the end of the drought.

The extremely dry conditions prompted Mayor Eric Adams on Monday to declare the first drought warning since 2002 — and urged New Yorkers to conserve water.

New York City hasn’t received a quarter-inch of rain in a day since Sept. 29.

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