The Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Safety Project

Col. Jessica Goffena (right), U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Tulsa District Commander, signs updated partnership documents for the Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Safety Project as Todd Kilpatrick (left), levee manager, Tulsa County Drainage District 12 observes.

 

The Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Safety Project is a flood risk management effort  between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Tulsa District and the sponsor, Tulsa County Drainage District 12. The project aims to address significant needs for the 80-year old levee along the Arkansas River from Sand Springs to Tulsa.

The project began with a feasibility study appropriated by the Supplemental to the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018. 

The Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee System was constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Tulsa District, and turned over to Tulsa County Drainage District 12 for operation and maintenance after completion in 1945.

The major features of the project include installation of a filtered berm, modern toe drains to improve drainage, and reduce the potential of erosion.

The Tulsa & West Tulsa Levees A & B have been given a rating of a Levee Safety Action Classification 1, indicating a very high risk and the need to take immediate action. The TWT levees protect neighborhoods, parks, industrial areas and downtown Tulsa. The Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Safety Project addresses major performance deficiencies caused by long term degradation of the foundation, construction materials and engineering systems that have exceeded service life.

Past performance has been demonstrated during significant floods along the Arkansas River. Flood events have occurred in 1923, 1959, 1975, 1986, 1993, 1998, 2007 and most recently, 2019 when more than 2000 sandbags were needed at the Charles Page Floodway and Sandy Park Areas, 15 portable pumps were placed along the 11 mile corridor, large equipment was brought into multiple areas to slow or stop flooding, and engineering solutions were being improvised in the field to equalize hydrostatic pressure and slow the movement of water through and under the levee.  

This project was approved based on potential life loss, which was predicted to be as high as 40 residents in the event of a night breach and 33 in the event of a breach during daylight hours depending upon key locations.

 

National Levee Database Website

Aerial image of the Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee from 2019. Link to Nation Levee Data Base website.

 

The National Levee Database is a comprehensive, public, web-based repository of levee information. It provides detailed information on the location, condition, and risk associated with thousands of levee systems across the United States.
Video by Brannen Parrish
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Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Project Meeting Presentation
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Tulsa District
May 4, 2026 | 23:43
Chris Baker, risk communications, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Tulsa District, provides an update on the Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Safety Project to community members during a community meeting in Tulsa, Okla., April 30, 2026.

The Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee Safety Project goal is to reduce the likelihood of erosion and levee breach from flooding along the Arkansas River in Tulsa and Tulsa County. The 20-mile levee system provides a barrier to flooding from Sand Springs, Okla. to Tulsa. The Tulsa District is working with the State of Oklahoma, Tulsa County, the City of Tulsa, the City of Sand Springs and the project sponsor, Tulsa County Drainage District 12 to address levee deficiencies.

The Tulsa-West Tulsa Levee was constructed by the Tulsa District during World War II and relinquished to Tulsa County Drainage District 12 in after construction completed in 1945.

The project includes the incorporation of filter berms and improved toe drains to improve drainage and reduce potential for erosion from inside the levee. Construction is expected to start in 2027.
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