Buyers Guide 2010

Structural Stormwater BMPs

Best management practices for treating and managing runoff

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Photo: Utah DOT

By Janet Aird

2 Comments


And in some ways, the Legacy Project improved the wetlands. For example, one of the features UDOT took into account was the oxbows that had formed over the years in the Jordan River, which flows through the preserve and empties into the Great Salt Lake. Before the area began to be developed, floodwater from the river would fill the oxbows. But with development, the flow of the river was controlled and the oxbows dried out. The project has put water back into the oxbows again.

Drainage has been crucial in this project. Multiple culverts run under the parkway, allowing runoff from the mountains to the east and the lake to the west to drain under the road.

UDOT used multiple piping systems to handle the runoff from the mountains and the lake and multiple sizes of pipe to handle the different flows. Some of the natural channels in the preserve have fairly high flows and require pipes as large as 60 inches in diameter, Campagna says. Other areas, such as roadway drainage, have lower flows and require pipes as small as 18 inches.

Photo: Utah DOT
Laying pipe in the trenches
Most of the pipe came from ADS, the world’s largest producer of HDPE corrugated plastic pipe, and was manufactured at a nearby plant. The 400 feet of 54-inch-diameter pipe is made by Hancor, which was founded in Findlay, OH. It is owned by ADS and operates manufacturing facilities and service centers across the country. Both ADS and Hancor pipes have an integral bell and spigot system, and Hancor pipes have a polymer composite fused to the outside of the bell with a factory-installed gasket.

UDOT chose these pipes, which have a corrugated exterior and a smooth interior, for a number of reasons. “From a long-term perspective, you don’t see the same kind of deterioration with HDPE as you do with corrugated metal piping,” says Campagna. “The soil tends to be corrosive because the lake floods in the spring. When it dries, it leaves a salt deposit.”

The pipes are watertight, lightweight, and cost-competitive. They can be handled with minimal equipment by a one- or two-person crew, even in 20-foot lengths. This length reduces the number of joints, saving labor and installation time.

“The pipes fit perfectly into our stormwater strategy,” he says. “It’s something we looked at very carefully. They’re improving the quality of the wetlands.”

Evanston Township High School
When Evanston Township High School in Evanston, IL, wanted to redo its athletic facilities and a city ordinance required it to install stormwater detention, the school took the idea and ran with it. The school selected a system that not only would detain most of the stormwater runoff from the site, but also would use the runoff to irrigate the school grounds.

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“Any time we can intercept stormwater and recycle it through irrigation, it’s a plus,” says Kevin Camino, P.E., principal and a senior project manager at Eriksson Engineering Associates Ltd. in Grayslake, IL, which designed the project. “Sometimes the initial cost [of a reuse system] is more, but it will save on irrigation costs in the long run.”

Evanston, which is north of Chicago and along Lake Michigan, faces flooding during even moderate rainfall. Storm runoff, which discharges into a regional deep tunnel, can exceed the capacity of the sewer system, and water levels can rise enough to cause basement and street flooding. The city requires that the runoff rate after development not exceed the predevelopment rate, which is no more than 0.15 cubic feet per second (cfs) per acre. Next Page >

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stormtrap09

May 29th, 2009 1:28 PM PT

When the need for a watertight application is required, a liner is used to provide a watertight seal around StormTrap units. When installed correctly; use of pipe boots, double-sided tape, band clamp, hot-air welder (if necessary), watertightness is achieved easily with the liner application. The same application is frequently used in the wastewater treatment industry to provide watertight applications where the potential for leakage and subsequent contamination is of the utmost concern. More information pertaining to the liners referenced above can be found at www.btlliners.com. Also, please feel free to contact myself at www.stormtrap.com Thanks, Brian Stahl P.E.

eclon

May 20th, 2009 11:33 AM PT

The StormTrap structure is not watertight. StormTrap requires wrapping with a liner in order to retain/detain stormwater. Use of a liner is problematic because of the difficulty in maintaining a watertight seal at any pipe connection.

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