January-February 2007

Integrating Stormwater

The role of landscape architecture and site design in stormwater treatment

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By Bill Tice

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Bruce Ferguson, Franklin Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Georgia and director of the university’s School of Environmental Design, says the City of Portland is doing a great job when it comes to integrating stormwater design into landscape architecture. “We have to end the idea that stormwater management facilities are expected to be utilitarian intrusions on the cities where they are located,” he says. “Cities are supposed to be for people, so we need to bring urban stormwater facilities in line with that purpose. Portland is the city everyone is talking about, and they are doing a great job when it comes to integrating stormwater systems with landscape architecture.”

Photo: Bruce K. Ferguson
Porous pavements retrofitted into an urban alley under Vancouver, BC’s “Country Lane” program

Ferguson says it is crucial on new development projects to start looking at stormwater management as one of the first steps. “You have to look at stormwater when you are laying out the design. There is no right way or wrong way, but you have the choices in front of you. At various stages in a project, it is a case of looking at the land-use type, the transportation, the site planning, and the materials. The general philosophy is to work with the space you have and to keep water in contact with soil, vegetation, air, and sunlight, beginning at the first possible opportunity and continuing as long as possible. That means, for example, looking at where every downspout discharges and possibly building something in that space, like a rain garden or vegetated swale.” Ferguson is also a big supporter of porous pavement technology, and he says the use of porous pavement can play a significant role in managing stormwater. “In most urban settings, pavement is two-thirds of the constructed—potential impervious—surface area,” he adds.

Porous pavement is a special type of pavement that, if constructed and maintained properly, allows rain and snowmelt to pass through it, reducing the runoff from a site. Porous pavement can also filter some pollutants from the runoff. It is a subject Ferguson knows well, as he has published a 577-page book on the topic entitled Porous Pavement, and he regularly travels across the country to speak on the topic. He is also an advisory committee member on a Water Environment Research Foundation (WERF) project that is investigating “Successful Integration of Stormwater Best Management Practices (BMPs) into the Urban Landscape.” The two-year project, which is scheduled to wrap up in mid-2007, is evaluating the social, aesthetic, and community aspects that contribute to the success or failure of stormwater BMPs.

Photo: Moseley Architects
Including cisterns in a design allows for water collection and reuse.

“The purpose of this project is to identify the key factors that influence the success of stormwater BMP project implementation and community acceptance,” explains Jeff Moeller, the senior program director at WERF. “Case studies will illustrate these factors and bring them to life in order to provide guidance to communities developing stormwater BMP programs. Ultimately, the project team will develop a highly visual CD-ROM or Web-based tool to disseminate the results. This information will be of interest to water resource engineers, landscape architects, municipal stormwater managers, public officials, environmental groups, and others involved in stormwater management.”

Moeller says in the past, most of the literature and information that has been developed on stormwater BMPs has focused on the technical design and performance aspects rather than the social, aesthetic, and community factors around which this project is centered.

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“By identifying common relationships that influence success, including agency coordination and communications practices, capital and maintenance expenditures, and approaches to public education that raise awareness and public acceptance, this research is expected to be particularly valuable in advancing the state of our knowledge, as well as potentially removing barriers to BMP adoption in some communities,” adds Moeller. “The project may also help end users achieve more aesthetically pleasing and multipurpose BMP designs that provide amenity and benefit to communities in addition to their water-quality functions.”

The project team, panel of experts, and project subcommittee met for the first time in Alexandria, VA, in April 2006, and then again in October 2006 in Dallas at WEFTEC. Leslie Shoemaker of Tetra Tech Inc., a Pasadena, CA–based worldwide provider of consulting, engineering, and technical services, and Jane Kulik of Denver, CO–based Wenk Associates Inc., a provider of a broad range of planning and landscape architectural services, are the co-principal investigators (PIs) for the project, and Martina Keefe of Tetra Tech Inc. serves as the project coordinator. “This project is unique in that it has brought together a multidisciplinary panel of experts in design, engineering, land development, municipal management, and other fields to explore and provide examples of the technical, social, and organizational techniques for successful BMP design and implementation,” says Moeller. “WERF has also assembled a project subcommittee composed of a variety of experts on the topic that provide peer review and oversight to the project.” Next Page >

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