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Lake Veere Dam

The Lake Veere Dam is located in the former Veerse Gat and connects Walcheren with Noord-Beveland.

Together with the Delta work Zandkreekdam and the already existing Sloedam, the Lake Veere Dam closes off the Lake Veere. This significantly shortened the coastline of the Zeeland islands.

Origin

The Lake Veere Dam was part of the Three-Island Plan to connect Walcheren with Noord- and Zuid-Beveland. Variations of this plan had existed long before the 1953 Flood Disaster. After the Flood Disaster, the Three-Island Plan reappeared in the fourth report from the Delta Commission. The goal was to create a shorter coastline, which would be easier to protect than dozens of kilometers of dikes, and more cost-effective than raising dikes everywhere. As a bonus, roads over the dams would better connect the islands.

First, the short Zandkreek Dam, 830 meters long, was constructed to gain experience. The Lake Veere Dam marked the beginning of the "larger works," stretching 2.8 kilometers long at a location where 70 million cubic meters of seawater flowed in and out with the tides. It served as a stepping stone to the Grevelingen Dam, Brouwers Dam, and the Eastern Scheldt Storm Surge Barrier.

The Lake Veere Dam does not have an opening or sluice for shipping. This meant that the fishing fleets from Veere and Arnemuiden had to relocate in 1961, just before the final closure. The fishermen found a new home port at Colijnsplaat.

The remaining opening of 324 meters was also sealed with caissons, but this time of a new type. These ‘sluice caissons’ allowed water to pass through during placement on the seabed, preventing them from being carried away by the current. Once all the caissons were positioned exactly in place, the openings in the caissons were closed with sluice gates during slack tide, when the current was minimal. After that, the caissons were filled with sand.

Initially, the Lake Veere Dam was a true asphalt dam, but in the 1990s, the dam was transformed to have a more natural appearance. It is now covered with green vegetation, and a wide beach has been created on the sea side, with a large parking area on the side of the Veerse Lake. Today, it is hard to imagine that concrete caissons lie beneath the surface.

Address

Weg van de Buitenlandse Pers 5, Ouwerkerk

Opening hours

Open daily from 10:00 to 17:00. Between November 1 and March 31, the museum and bistro Het Vijfde Caisson are closed on Mondays.