July-August 2008

Sustainable Stormwater

Methods of capture, treatment, and reuse

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By Carol Brzozowski

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When it comes to stormwater capture, treatment, and reuse, developer John Wesley Miller is quite sensitive to the need for reusing every drop of water he can in his home designs.

Miller has developed two zero-energy homes featuring rainwater-harvesting systems in the arid desert of Tucson, AZ. And, while water conservation is a selling point for homebuyers, most don’t understand anything about stormwater, Miller says.

“First you get them to understand solar energy and energy conservation and the effects of things on the planet, and then you get them to understand the connection between water and energy and energy and water,” says Miller.

“Then you go to the last thing: water runs off and becomes stormwater. Most people don’t care about stormwater unless they get flooded. Storms are the best way to get people to understand stormwater.”

Miller represents a host of developers incorporating an increasing number of sustainable stormwater designs into their developments. Some are in response to government requirements to do so for publicly funded buildings. Others seek to accommodate clients requesting more “green” features in their homes.

And many companies constructing new buildings are responding to an increase in standards focusing on a slate of green products and designs, including stormwater.

Among the major considerations in sustainable stormwater design: cost, space, location, maintenance, and regulations.

Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) for Homes and the National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) respective development standards will mean that builders who wish to attain certain certification levels must consider how they will design the landscape for stormwater runoff and treatment. Retaining stormwater onsite for irrigation use, for example, helps save domestic water use and costs.

The EPA reports that an American family of four uses up to 400 gallons of water per day, with 30% of that for outdoor uses. More than half of that is used for landscape irrigation.

Ann Archino Howe, a civil engineer whose specialties include sustainable site design, works with municipalities in finding solutions for stormwater concerns.

“Stormwater is the major site issue we are confronted with all over the country,” says Howe, of the Sustainable Design Studio in Portland, ME.

“At this point, we’ve built on all of the easy sites,” she says. “Until recently, we have seen stormwater as a waste product of development instead of as a resource. So we are looking much more carefully at the long-term effects of developing a particular site in a particular watershed—not just the site effects, but the watershed-wide effects on streams, lakes, erosion issues, and sedimentation.”

Larry Coffman, president of Stormwater Services in Chesapeake Beach, MD, points out that with the advent of Phase II of the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) most local jurisdictions are concerned about compliance.

“However, it really depends on where you are around the country in terms of the importance of stormwater management,” he says.

Compared to other parts of the country, storms in Maine tend to last longer, so Howe will design based on a 24-hour design storm.

“I know in some parts of the country, they base their designs on 30 minutes for a lot of storms,” she adds. “That’s one of the difficulties in talking about techniques that work in one part of the country, but not in another part. But there are certain basic things you can always choose, although everybody needs to be thinking in terms of what kind of storms they have.”

Coffman points out that a major concern in US coastal regions is protecting the biological integrity of the receiving waters and the fisheries. “For them, urban stormwater runoff and retrofit is a big issue, whether they’re dealing with the coastal bays or need to reduce the influx of pollutants to protect shellfish and other fisheries,” he says.

“In other parts of the country, the concern is with water supply—maintaining the volume, integrity, and quality of the water being used. In some areas, they are interested in stormwater management for control of combined sewer overflows. There is a wide range of important issues that stormwater touches upon. One of the things we are seeing in the industry is a broadening of the understanding of the importance of stormwater management.”

Conditions under which a developer would choose alternative methods of sustainable development depend on the developer’s goals for the receiving waters, Coffman says.

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“Your stormwater management technologies help achieve those goals, whether it’s restoration of impaired water, protection of a reservoir, or protection and restoration of fisheries,” he says.

However, he points out, “Stormwater technology is not designed to restore the integrity of receiving waters. Conventional technology is really designed to meet the minimum standards set by federal and state governments. Generally, those are insufficient and inadequate to restore receiving waters. Reducing the impacts of urbanization probably isn’t good enough to get us where we want to go.” Next Page >

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