Arlington’s Water System
In 1922, the State of Virginia passed legislation to permit the establishment of sanitary districts within the County for the purpose of constructing water and sewer systems.
By the 1920s, while a few Arlington communities were serviced by privately-owned water companies (including Aurora Hills and Cherrydale), most of the County’s 16,040 residents got their water from individual shallow wells, which were inconvenient and susceptible to pollution.
In 1922, the State of Virginia passed legislation to permit the establishment of sanitary districts within the County to construct water and sewer systems.
The Arlington County Board of Supervisors contracted engineer Asa E. Phillips to investigate options for a County-wide water system in 1926. Phillips and the County Board proposed several solutions to County residents. Eventually, residents decided that instead of building its water filtration plant, Arlington County would request water from Washington, D.C., which had recently finished construction on the Dalecarlia Water Plant.
After Congress passed two authorizing acts – the first to allow the sale of the federal water supply to Arlington County, and the second to connect the federal water system to the Arlington County water system – and the Virginia General Assembly authorized bonds for the construction and operation of the water supply, construction began on the water main that would connect Dalecarlia to Lyonhurst Station in North Arlington, one of the highest points in the County. Lyonhurst Station had a pump station, a 260,000-gallon water tower, and a 1.5- million-gallon reservoir.
On November 3, 1927, public water supply service began in Arlington. The County declared a memorable holiday and threw a Water Carnival in Lyon Village to celebrate. The Water Carnival consisted of a parade with floats decorated by various county groups, a fire hydrant demonstration, dancing, fireworks, a barbeque, and even a jousting tournament! In the water spirit of the event, many of the afternoon activities were rained out, but that did not dampen the celebration too much as the evening programs continued.
The distribution system in Arlington has significantly expanded and updated from the original 1927 system, and improvements to the system initiated in 1953 have since made Lyonhurst Station obsolete.
Arlington County's water source is the Potomac River. The water is then treated and comes to us from the Dalecarlia Water Treatment Plant, run by the Washington Aqueduct.