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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Rozumalski says the city is ecstatic with the results. “They love it,” he says. “They are very proud of the beauty and function of the project and providing an example of how their citizens can protect Minnetonka’s natural resources.”

Bryna Dunn, director of environmental planning and research for Richmond, VA–based Moseley Architects and chair of the US Green Building Council’s Sustainable Sites Technical Advisory Group, says keeping and treating water onsite is an important consideration when developing stormwater management systems. But in addition to natural solutions such as rain gardens, she says Moseley Architects has been including cisterns in a few of its designs as a way to collect and reuse stormwater.

“If we collect stormwater from the roofs of buildings, we are able to save and use that water for irrigation, cooling tower make-up, and flushing of toilets,” explains Dunn. “It is a way of keeping that water onsite rather than just putting it into a pipe and sending it off to become someone else’s problem. Also, when you are using stormwater for these purposes, you are potentially saving on your water bill.”

Moseley Architects specializes in public sector buildings, including schools, and Dunn says in many cases, the stormwater systems can be tied into the curriculum, creating a learning opportunity for the students. “We are currently working on a project for the TC Williams replacement high school in Alexandria, Virginia,” she explains. “They are doing a number of innovative things to make this a high-performance green building, including installing a 450,000-gallon cistern that will supply the school’s irrigation systems, cooling system, and toilets.”

The concrete vault, or cistern, is buried underground in front of the 465,000-square-foot school, and both the runoff from the roof drains and the cooling tower condensate is piped into it. The water will be filtered, cleaned, and tinted with a food-grade dye before being sent back into the school for use.

“Historically, water for things like cooling systems, irrigation, and toilet flushing would come from the drinking water source, so we looked at this opportunity and said, “Why not use this nonpotable source of water instead?’” says Dunn.

Moseley Architects is also working on a building that the company will eventually move into. This historic building in Richmond, VA, was a warehouse and workshop for a truck-mounted hydraulic lift repair center. The architectural firm has purchased the building and is in the process of renovating it into commercial office space.

Photo: Nevue Ngan Associates
A portion of Portland, OR's Green Street Project

“On this building, we are also planning on including a cistern to collect the roof runoff,” says Dunn. “It will have a green roof, and we will be replacing the hard-packed gravel parking lot with permeable paving, creating rain gardens, and installing biofilters. By doing all of these things, we can slow down the stormwater considerably, and we should be able to reduce the site’s load on the city’s aging combined sewer and stormwater system by at least 60%.”

Michele Adams, a principal engineer with Cahill Associates Inc. in the Philadelphia, PA, area, says looking at how sites manage rainfall naturally before they are developed can help designers and engineers come up with creative solutions for stormwater systems.

“It all begins by understanding how the site works,” says Adams, who is part of a 30-year-old water resources firm with a mix of engineers, scientists, and planners. “You have to look at the rainfall, the geology, and the vegetation, and then design components that replicate how the site worked before it was developed. The process begins by forming a project team that works together right from the start.”

Photo: Nevue Ngan Associates
Lanscaped areas between street and sidewalk capture runoff.

Adams says the Penn State University Visitor’s Center is a good example of this. “The Penn State project was very much a collaborative effort,” she says. “The architect was Susan Maxman Architects in Philadelphia; the landscape architect was Andropogon Landscape Architecture, also in Philadelphia; and we were the stormwater engineers. The architects fitted the building very carefully into the topography of the site, while the landscape architect worked closely with us to develop ways of creatively dealing with stormwater. This included incorporating rain gardens, vegetative infiltration beds, infiltration trenches, and porous pavement for the parking lots and sidewalks as a means to allow the site to maintain some natural functions.

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The most important aspect of this project is that the stormwater is managed where it is generated and that greatly reduces the need for pipes.” Another project Cahill Associates worked on recently was the kindergarten-to-grade-8 Penn Alexander School in urban west Philadelphia. For this project, Cahill Associates was also the stormwater engineer and worked closely with the Philadelphia Water Department, the University of Pennsylvania, AOL-B Architects, and Olin Landscape Architects in Philadelphia.

“Like a lot of old cites, Philadelphia has combined sewers. When it rains heavily, the sewers fill and discharge a combination of stormwater and sewage to the nearest waterway,” says Adams. “The Water Department has been looking at ways to reduce these overflows by reconnecting stormwater to the land where safe and feasible instead of expressing it to the city’s sewer systems. The goal is to use nature’s designs in our urban management systems, and this was one of the first projects to do this. At Penn Alexander, we accomplished this by taking all of the runoff from the new playground and the roof of the school and directed it to a storage infiltration bed that is located under a new athletic field. A playground with a porous asphalt surface and an adjacent rain garden also catch some of the runoff. All of these things collectively reduce the stormwater burden to the sewers, a significantly less expensive solution than building large, underground storage tanks.” Next Page >

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