Buyers Guide 2010

Technology and Information Management

Tools for stormwater managers and hydrologists

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Eubanks says Wallingford Software has saved Fort Worth both time and money. “We’d always heard it’s the Cadillac of modeling software, and it costs us quite a bit. But because we are dealing with several hundred million dollars of capital improvements, and they’re all going to be complex because they are storm drains through developed areas that follow the old terrain which has nothing to do with the street grid, we think we are going to recoup our investment in Wallingford probably within the first project or two,” says Eubanks. “We are looking at spending tens of millions of dollars on some of these projects.

“Obviously, having confidence that our models are reliable is important,” he adds. “We have to make sure we’re not spending $25 million dollars on a project, but at the end of it we’ve still got a flooding situation because the modeling was not that reliable. We do have a lot of confidence in what Wallingford is giving us.”

Real-Time Data and Better Modeling in Kentucky
The more sophisticated data a stormwater manager can obtain, the more helpful it is in future stormwater system planning.

To that end, the Louisville/Jefferson County (Kentucky) Metropolitan Sewer District (MSD) has used OneRain technology for several years. The system provides Web and local visualization services, radar rainfall estimation, rain gauges, real-time satellite telemetry, telemetry system integration, and storm properties analysis.

Annual rainfall averages 44 inches in the county, a Phase I community, which measures 400 square miles. The district’s service area covers 90% of that area, with the remaining areas still not served by sewers, says Justin Gray, a senior technical services engineer with the Louisville/Jefferson Kentucky MSD.

The OneRain data has been useful in helping the district in planning its response to a consent decree to mitigate all combined sewer overflows (CSOs) and sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) through an $800-million capital improvement project, Gray says.

“From a planning perspective, it’s helped save money, because it gives us better-calibrated models and better distribution of how our rainfall events actually occur within our county, which, ultimately, makes our planning process for sizing of detention basins, underground storage basins, or treatment facilities more credible,” he says.

“The better you know how your rainfall normally occurs in the county, the better your planning projects are going to be down the road,” adds Gray. “Operationally, it saves time, because you can target areas that are being hit the hardest rather than waiting for customers to call in and tell you that their basements are backing up. We can see areas that received 5 inches of rainfall in two hours, so we can direct crews out to that area to look for problems. You can be proactive, and you’re not spread as thin.”

Historically, the district has partnered with the USGS, which for years has maintained stream gauges throughout the county. “The OneRain products helped us utilize that [stream gauge information] in a real-time fashion more effectively through our own system,” says Gray.

He notes that a significant portion of the district’s system is a combined sewer system that conveys both sanitary and stormwater flows to its largest wastewater treatment plant. The combined lines are large, with the largest being 27 feet by 18 feet.

“During any given wet-weather event we have, depending on its pattern, we could have storage capabilities in portions of the line that aren’t experiencing the heaviest rainfall,” says Gray. “So we put in control points, almost like a traffic system, where we can raise or lower gates to store water in pipes.”

To assist in that matter, the district uses OneRain’s predictive gauge-adjusted radar rainfall estimates. “We use the two-hour predictive rainfall estimate and run it through the hydraulic model that monitors the current state of the system,” says Gray. “It looks at the predictive rainfall amounts that are incoming and sets the set points of our controls at about eight different places.”

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The Louisville/Jefferson Kentucky MSD recently got online with Contrail Web, a site that allows district officials to access a map showing predictive rainfalls four hours out for the region.

“It also reflects our rainfall gauge distribution,” says Gray. “We have about 16 within the county, and we can access rainfall gauge data directly from that site. We can download data for any time period and export it into any format and do whatever we want with it from that point.” Next Page >

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