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


An underground detention system, StormTrap, was installed at the high school in 2008. The concrete modular stormwater detention system, built by precasters throughout the country, was chosen because of its expected longevity and the determination that ultimately it was the most economically viable system available.

“Underground detention is typically more costly than aboveground detention, but it allows the land to be utilized more efficiently,” says Camino.

A city street divides the campus into the north side, which now has synthetic turf in the new soccer and football stadium, and the south side, which has natural turf in the new baseball, soccer, and softball fields. StormTrap was installed in both locations.

The project used the DoubleTrap system, which is watertight, to maximize the total water stored while minimizing the footprint of the system. The StormTrap system can also be configured to allow water to infiltrate into the soil and can include treatment options such as sand filters and sediment basins. The rectangular units that make up the system range in height from 2 feet 4 inches to 10 feet, allowing them to be configured to virtually any site.

Because the units used in this project are 10 feet high, crews excavated about 12 feet deep and placed aggregate bedding in the hole to create the StormTrap foundations. On the north side, they discovered soft clay subsoil.

Photo: Utah DOT
The project used more than 65,000 feet of pipe from 18 inches to 60 inches in diameter.
“In general, the football stadium had really bad soils,” says Camino, “and synthetic turf requires a very firm base. We used lime stabilization to stabilize the clay before we installed the stone drainage layer.”

In the soccer and football stadium, the lime stabilization increased the impermeability and load-bearing capacity of the clay to form a “bridge” between the clay and the stone aggregate.

On the north side, crews installed 18 StormTrap units, which can handle 11,273 cubic feet of runoff. On the south side, 71 units can handle 55,075 cubic feet.

“The system collects the majority of the water that hits the school district’s fields,” says Camino. Runoff from both the north and south sides flows into catch basins, where it is routed through underdrains to the StormTrap units.

The runoff doesn’t have to be treated, he says. “Synthetic turf is cleaner than a parking lot, and with grass areas, you’re just talking about fertilizer.”

The stored water is pumped through a new, fully automated irrigation system to irrigate the grounds. The system is connected to the city’s water supply as well, so it can draw water for irrigation from the city when necessary. The school’s system provides 80 to 90% of its irrigation water, depending on the amount of rainfall.

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Maintenance is minimal. StormTrap should be inspected once a year for sediment.

“It was a terrific project,” says Camino. “A lot of municipalities haven’t updated their ordinances to provide credit for stormwater detention or water-quality systems like these, so there’s little incentive to install them.” The city of Evanston has provided credit for both. 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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