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Janice Kaspersen Janice Kaspersen Stormwater Editor

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SW Editor's Blog

February 2nd, 2009 6:52am PST

Demonstrating Green

Posted By Janice Kaspersen Comments

Last week, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection announced its funding of a demonstration project in Escambia County, Florida, that will include, among other things, the state’s largest green roof. The money came in the form of a $1.4 million Urban BMP Research and Demonstration Grant, designed to support innovative land use and stormwater BMPs. Fittingly, the project’s site is a facility that will process county building permits and development applications. It will also include a pervious pavement parking lot.

In the last few years, the DEP has funded two other green roof projects in the state, with its funds paying for construction and for monitoring stormwater quality after installation, and local matching funds paying mainly for the land, the design of the building, and ongoing maintenance.

Monitoring and research on the previous projects have yielded results that can be used by others planning and designing green roofs in the region. For example, a green roof project in Ft. Meyers helped determine which plants are most successful in Florida’s climate (and showed that a cistern and irrigation system is necessary to maintain them during some seasons). The other project helped determine by how much a green roof reduces heat transfer through the roof.

With this third green roof project—more than 33,000 square feet of it—the DEP says it hopes to provide a hands-on site where local builders can “touch and feel” the roof and see how it works before incorporating similar features into their own projects. Other cities have targeted the public directly; Portland, Oregon’s Bureau of Environmental Services, for example, highlights stormwater management features around the city by mapping out bicycle and walking tours of sites that lead visitors past green roofs, rain gardens, pervious pavement installations, and other Green Streets features.

Does your city, county, or state encourage stormwater demonstration sites? How effective do you think these are in encouraging imitation of the practices shown—and who is most effectively reached, the public at large or specific groups such as builders and developers?

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