Buyers Guide 2010

Technology and Information Management

Tools for stormwater managers and hydrologists

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By Carol Brzozowski

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The city also is considering tunneling and traditional open-cut solutions. Any open-cut solution would include property buyouts.

“We’re not talking about 4- to 6-foot-diameter pipes. We’re talking, for example, of a double 6-by-6 box as a relief pipe, where we might have a 48-inch pipe now,” says Eubanks. “We have a lot of really large deficiencies, and as we’re going to use the Wallingford modeling over the next 10 years, trying to map the flooding in most of our larger storm drains, we’ll also be able to use it to determine the best kind of solution that will alleviate most of the flooding.”

That may involve a phased solution that entails improvements in a bad area upstream done in such a way that does not create worse flooding downstream. “Only in having a real reliable hydraulic model will we have confidence that we can look at these various solutions, and that they will give us an accurate depiction of what kind of improvements we need to make and what’s going to be our best course of action,” says Eubanks.

Fort Worth has an engineer on staff, Amy Cannon, who is becoming an expert at using the Wallingford software, says Eubanks.

“She was really surprised at how quickly it went to build the first model,” he says. “Now she’s spending a lot of time tweaking it to get it to run better, but she’s really satisfied with the capabilities it’s giving her to look at the problems with this system.”

As Fort Worth develops the models, it will undertake projects such as retrofits, redevelopment, and land use changes, says Eubanks.

“It will provide us with the tools so that, over the next 30 to 40 years, we’ll be able to line up the capital work that needs to be done and identify the most critical projects,” says Eubanks. “We will continue to calibrate it. We will be able to say we will need additional improvements in the neighborhood that we were only able to spend $15 million in at one point.

“It gives us a lot of confidence that we will actually have something that will give us continual information on how our system is going to respond.”        

Until recently, the city had only a few sets of schematic maps, with the most recent being from 1992. Since bringing Wallingford Software on board during autumn 2008, the goal has been to do a complete mapping of the city’s entire storm drain system.

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“This is one of the initiatives our stormwater utility kicked off in 2006,” says Eubanks. “We are going to run all of the models through InfoNet as part of the GIS [geographic information system] mapping. InfoNet will give us a lot of tools for diagnosing our system.

“One of the things it can do is create a profile of a storm drain system, so you can instantly see if you had an invert elevation that was entered incorrectly and the pipe goes up 15 feet before it goes back down again,” says Eubanks. “We know that doesn’t happen. By running everything through InfoNet, it will help us get the most of our system model ready. Then we can hire the consultants to go back through and evaluate each of the watersheds as it comes up in our budget priority and develop projects around existing flooding: How many homes are affected, and what’s going to be the range of cost and solutions to fix this?” Next Page >

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