Las Tres Haciendas Waterworks (Spanish: Sistema de riego de las tres haciendas) is an irrigation system located in southern Puerto Rico, in the municipality of Santa Isabel. It consists of a set of structures that were built between 1846 and 1886 by landowners to transport water from the Coamo River to the fields of their sugarcane plantations. Las Tres Haciendas (Spanish for 'the three homesteads') is named refers to the three sugarcane haciendas it serves: El Destino, Florida, and Hacienda Santa Isabel.[1]
Built in brick, stone and lime mortar masonry with concrete plastering, the system consists of seven structures: a dam on the Coamo River, an inlet for torrential waters (toma de aguas torrenciales), a low (estiales) and seasonal (estacionales) waters module, a main supply channel with underground and open sections, three main branch lines which supplied each of the haciendas, and a site containing the remnants of a water distribution module.[1]
The main supply channel and the three branch lines are characterized by not presenting side locks, except for those added when this system was integrated into the Irrigation District of the Southern Coast (Distrito de riego de la costa sur), built between 1908 and 1914. The Tres haciendas system runs for 9.7 km through the coastal plain of Santa Isabel, using only gravity to transport the water through a set of underground, open, and elevated channels. The system is not in use since the 1990s which has resulted in some deterioration of its components. It presents some modifications and repairs dating to the 20th century, when the canals were integrated to the newer irrigation system. Sections of the system have been impacted by modern agricultural machinery, and one of its key components, the distribution module, was partially demolished, albeit under archaeological supervision. However, this is one of the most complete and well-preserved irrigation systems of the 19th century in the southern coastal valley, and possibly of the island.[1]