Published: Dec. 1, 2013 By

Red Lion

Good news! The Red Lion restaurant made it through the great deluge of 2013.

β€œPeople don’t realize it, but we’re 50 feet above ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Creek,” owner Chris Mueller told me. As a result, the 50-year-old restaurant in ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Canyon is safe and dry. It was closed, however, for nearly a month because ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Canyon didn’t open until Oct. 7.

As for ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ and CU, they’re standing tall but soggy. I spent a couple days driving around ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ trying to size up just what happened after Mom Nature dumped 18 inches of rain on the city from Sept. 9-16.Μύ

It was a hell of a flood but not the flood ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ had been expecting. ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ has always assumed that β€œthe big one” would be a β€œ100-year” or worse flood on ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Creek. A β€œ100-year” flood is a flood that has a 1 percent chance of happening in any given year. In a β€œ100-year” flood ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Creek would flow at 11,500 cubic feet per second (cfs).Μύ

The peak flow during this year’s flood was 5,300 cfs, which is a β€œ25-year” flood by ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Creek standards.

There was some flooding near the creek’s banks, but Pearl Street and downtown ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ dodged the bullet.

The real flooding was caused by the small creeks. Gregory Gulch, Bear Creek in south ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ and Four Mile Canyon Creek in north ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ jumped their banks big time. Their flooding probably was up to the 100-year-flood level or more.Μύ

In addition, the pounding rain that soaked ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ for hours cascaded down streets and into hundreds of homes, often in particularly obnoxious ways. Water got into the city’s sanitary sewers and flooded into homes from drains and toilets.Μύ

A guy living around 8th and College told me his toilet gushed for three hours and left 18 inches of water in his basement.Μύ

But the damage was hit and miss. I found CU-ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ 2001 Nobel laureate Eric Cornell and his wife and daughters clearing sand off their sidewalk and parking strip. They were lucky. They live close to Gregory Gulch but hardly any water got in the house.

I only saw one building that was destroyed β€” an office building at 100 Arapahoe that housed Talmey-Drake Research & Strategy, a polling company founded by former CU student body president Paul Talmey (A&S’67, MBA’78). A landslide swept down Flagstaff and collapsed it.Μύ

As for CU. 25 percent of campus buildings had minor flooding; almost everything was open for business in less than a week. Compared to the devastation in Jamestown and Lyons, ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ and CU were incredibly lucky. This time.

Photography by Peter Burke

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