July-August 2008

Sustainable Stormwater

Methods of capture, treatment, and reuse

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By Carol Brzozowski

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A wet pond is another tool used by Howe.

“I designed a wet pond for a project in Augusta that became a design feature with a fountain, but the key element is that it treats stormwater,” says Howe. “The first one and a half inches of stormwater is treated through a gravel filter along the side. It’s not intrusive; it fits right into the landscape.”

Howe says she also tries to do more with pervious pavement, although she notes that in some areas it has been slow to be accepted. “One of the key things you need to use pervious asphalt and make it cost-effective is that the state’s department of transportation has to adopt what’s called an open-graded asphalt mix,” she says. “It’s a standard mix; otherwise, if you’re trying to incorporate pervious asphalt, it’s a special mix and is extremely expensive.”

Some people are designing walkways with pervious concrete, however, says Howe. “With all of these methods, you are treating that stormwater and recharging the groundwater,” she says.

Because Maine has many rural sites, Howe also uses undisturbed forested areas as a path through which stormwater can be discharged, with the sediments and other pollutants adsorbed by the plant material.

“[Runoff] goes through a stone berm that disperses the water so it doesn’t enter the wooded area in a concentrated form, and then—depending on the soil type—you have an undisturbed forested area you can devote to a buffer. That’s a low-impact design that wouldn’t work in an urban area.”

While green roofs are an area in which Howe is interested, there are few places in Maine with enough population to create heat island effects, a major driver for using vegetative roofs.

However, Howe does work with mechanical and building engineers to create systems to direct roof runoff to an underground tank, with an overflow filtration bed, for treatment and recycled use, such as toilet flushing.

Bob Jones, vice president and secretary of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and president-elect for 2010, says builders throughout the country are employing numerous sustainable building practices to enhance collection of stormwater runoff and treatment.

Collecting Runoff
Landscape design that focuses on native plants that take up water is not only a beneficial use of surface water, but also eliminates the need for piping and “may also eliminate some detention areas in new developments that collect water and in some instances become eyesores,” says Jones.

Another example: rainwater collection and distribution systems for non-potable water needs.

“What we’re really talking about here are cisterns, which are really no more than tanks, but this kind of rainwater collection can be used for irrigation and flushing of toilets,” says Jones. “What you’ve got to figure is how you get the distribution. You would use pipe of one form or another to get into the house and some kind of a pump.”

Anything to conserve stormwater for onsite use is a plus in the arid Southwest, Miller points out.

In constructing on a tract of land in Arizona, Miller says his company first considers the land planning, utilizing stormwater to minimize or eliminate the need for domestic water.

“You do the land grading so you can retain the water on each lot as long as it is safe,” he says. “Then the whole development has good drainage. Because of our erratic rainfall—we’ll have no rain for six months and then the sky will drop out—we have to grade our development so we have retention/detention areas in our master planning.”

The water is retained onsite as long as possible, says Miller.

“There’s a large area that has to fill up to a certain point before it can run into the storm sewer and put a burden on the municipal system,” he says.

Stormwater conservation and domestic water-use go hand in hand in Miller’s development, Armory Park del Sol. A 2006 water use study indicates that when compared to Tucson’s water use of 247 gallons per house per day (GPHD) in homes constructed in 2000 or after, houses in Armory Park del Sol use 119 GPHD. The study shows that over a decades-long lifespan of a home, Armory Park del Sol residents’ water savings will exceed 1.4 million gallons for each home.

Miller, who uses rainwater-harvesting systems, acknowledges that they are not always the best-looking feature on a home lot.

“One of the problems with them is they’re ugly, just like the first solar units were,” says Miller. “If you are going to work with them, you’ve got to think about the aesthetics.”

To that end, Miller has employed sculptures as a way of making rainwater harvesting look attractive.

“Arizona especially likes copper, so we’ve got these little copper cups where the water runs out of the drain pipe and forms a little waterfall down the cups,” he says. “In a deluge, it spills over, but in a normal small rain, we fill up our tanks.”

Water from the tanks is used to irrigate the plants on a home’s patio. The gravity-powered tanks are aboveground. Appearance also is a consideration in tank design, with homeowners given the opportunity to choose the colors they want for the tanks.

“They’re a composite material that can blend into your patio décor, and they have screens on them so they don’t fill up with debris,” says Miller.

At the bottom of the tank is a drain and a hose. All of a home’s tanks are looped together to avoid the sight of “ugly pipes running all over,” notes Miller.

“Water seeks its own level, so we have a larger tank that’s not as attractive back behind the corner hidden by a small wrought-iron trellis, and it’s on the same underground loop,” says Miller.

A hose for landscape irrigation delivers the harvested rainwater. During arid times when there is no rainwater to harvest, a timed pump operates a drip irrigation system.

Miller’s company also educates homeowners to dig deeper tree wells so that when it rains, the water soaks in around the plants and stays there for as long as it’s safe.

“A lot of people create a tree well by digging down and putting a ring around it, which is raised, and then the rainwater can’t run into it from the rest of the yard,” he says. “Recess it rather than raise it.”

In the arid Southwest, “obviously we don’t have a stormwater problem most of the time, but then you get complacent. When we get a ‘gully washer,’ if we get an inch of rain, it hits that dry, baked earth and just runs,” says Miller.

And it floods.

“All of our new developments have retention and detention ponds. The idea is to try to keep it where it lands, so it doesn’t run over into the storm drain. Most of the time, we soak it in on the property, but if we have an extreme rain, it’s got to go somewhere or it will flood houses. It takes a lot of hydrological engineering calculations and good guesses,” says Miller.

It’s Miller’s goal that his development can be a source of education for other developers and builders.

“What we’re doing at Armory Park not only impacts water conservation, but the stormwater system won’t have to be remodeled and enlarged,” Miller says.

“It’s time for developers, builders, and homeowners to be proactive rather than reactive.” Next Page >

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