Buyers Guide 2010

Keeping a LID on Runoff

Low-impact development mimics natures handling of water.

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Photo: Sara Cohen, Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation

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By Janis Keating

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Manufactured units can also save water. “We’re working right now to put cisterns all over the southeastern US,” says Moll. “We go to people who are landscape-conscious and tell them if they have watering restrictions, they can save and use the roof runoff. No matter how you develop a site, it will always have three times the runoff as it did when it was just ‘nature’; if you can keep any water onsite, you catch the pollution, and, eventually, the water you save will recharge the groundwater, which supports streams in time of drought.”

Are testing protocols biased against manufactured units, or inaccurate? “When cleaning my units, I’m finding more pollutants than the regulators said would be collected, because they used automated samplers and only test the first flush,” explains Moll. “Some of EPAs protocols, such as TSS 160.2, don’t test effectively. The Federal Interagency Sediment Project (FISP) has questions about EPA’s TSS testing process; we’ve been sitting here with a bunch of assumptions on bad tests and data for so long, yet others are afraid to move forward. Who’s going to inspect things, to make sure they work?

Photo: Filterra Bioretention Systems
An Inkberry shrub was planted in this unit.
“I can think of only one example,” he continues. “Montgomery County, MD, has monitored its maintenance costs for 15 years; otherwise, you can find very little information. The manufacturers of stormwater products have more testing results and more influent/effluent data.”

Moll hopes SWEMA’s member companies can answer questions and offer solutions. “We can police ourselves while we compete; we joined together to say ‘Ignorance is no excuse; it’s not us or green, its us and green.’ Measure us by what pollutants our products have caught, which we’ve carted off to landfills and kept out of lakes and streams.”

Mullen of Best Management Products emphasizes that SWEMA itself is not a testing organization. “We will be advocates—a clearinghouse of information for manufactured systems. Our goal is to offer performance data or results in a consistent and uniform manner, and ask that performance on land-based systems be presented in the same way and be subject to the same level of scrutiny as manufactured devices. What we’ve seen in the past is that a stormwater pond is given tacit approval as a BMP, but the data from a pond’s performance have not been given the same level of scrutiny as that directed toward manufactured systems. Some regulatory agencies don’t put us on equal footing as a stormwater pond; manufactured systems might be as good in some situations, especially on a site where space is tight and a pond is not feasible. We’re just trying to level the playing field through education and good science.”

Photo: Hanson Engineering Division of Dresdner Robin
Burying a StormTrap system, instead of digging a retention pond, saved valuable lot space.
In many jurisdictions, Mullen explains, post-development runoff must exceed the predevelopment runoff rate. “Of course, other stipulations may apply regarding the quality of the runoff, and this is where manufactured systems can play such an important role in safeguarding the environment.”

He notes that sometimes manufactured detention systems are used on a site. “There must be some reason why the developer decided on collecting the runoff, storing it, and letting it go at a controlled rate, instead of collecting it and letting the runoff perk or infiltrate back into the soils onsite. Maybe you’re in an area where the water table is too high, and retention or infiltration may not be a viable option.

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“You might store some of this stormwater in chambers or pipes to detain the water—under a parking lot, for example. Or, you could send it 100 yards or a half-mile away, where it can percolate into the soil. You have to pick and choose your methods, which are determined by the site. Sites have varying hydrology. Let’s say we know that the preconstruction discharge rate is  0.5 cubic feet per second. Based on site hydrology, the design engineer will create a stormwater detention or retention facility—either manufactured, land-based, or a combination of both—that will control the runoff, clean it up, and discharge it at the rate allowed by the jurisdiction, or have it percolate back into the soil. In any case, it’s a fairly straightforward design process, and having manufactured systems as an allowable option drastically increases the variety of ways stormwater runoff can be managed, while its quality is improved,” concludes Mullen.

Permeable Products
Asphalt or turf? For LID, the question’s a no-brainer; installing a permeable surface when one can is usually a good idea. When the area’s Mount Sinai Hospital needed a fire lane—but not more concrete—Rosenberg Gardner Landscape Architecture of Miami, FL, installed Invisible Structures’ Grasspave2. The porous paving surface allows parking, driving, and walking on a beautiful grass surface. Performing the functions of asphalt or concrete pavement, Grasspave2 does the job while providing the appearance of a lawn. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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tjm@bmpinc.com

June 30, 2009 8:41 AM PT

The writer above gives only half the story... Without proper maintenance, any BMP can re-suspend captured materials, bypass or not. A properly designed structure for a SNOUT (e.g. a deep sump) will limit re-suspension, and cleaning when sump hits half full condition will help further. Majority of floatables are retained no matter. BMP's Bio-Skirt can be added for extra oil retention or reduce bacteria if needed. But note that nearly 40,000 SNOUTs have been installed around the USA, and more go in everyday. It is a MADE in USA product that is affordable and effective. By the way, it's easy to put in a bypass structure for a SNOUT at the end of a pipe run, but unit shown is in an inlet where bypass is not feasible. See bmpinc.com for SNOUT with bypass if interested.

tdawson@dupageco.org

June 9th, 2009 1:47 PM PT

A catch basin with a baffle or a "Snout" is an example of a BMP that can resuspend all settled solids, and discharge oils and floatables collected in the first flush or months earlier. A bypass system, like in the CatchAll, Grate Gator, Stormceptor, Downstream Defender, etc. is needed.

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