January-February 2010

Philadelphia

Going green to manage stormwater

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Photo: Pennsylvania Horticultural Society

By Margaret Buranen

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Another benefit for PWD, Crockett says, is that “PHS has great working relationships with many parks friends groups and civic organizations, so the partnership has been very successful in spreading the message about the importance of managing stormwater, particularly using green infrastructure.”

In 2005, Philadelphia Green and PWD started work on a project to address stormwater problems at seven Philadelphia schools. At S. Weir Mitchell Elementary School, children created a raised bed vegetable garden in a paved parking lot, which will not only absorb stormwater, but also reduce the heat island effect. Vegetation, infiltration trenches, bioswales, and a rain garden replaced some of the school’s 3-acre impervious site.

Another joint stormwater project, in South Philly, will include the city’s first sidewalk infiltration planters, on South 13th Street. Modeled after street planters used in Portland, OR, they are designed to reduce overflows that led to basement flooding, a persistent problem in the area. These planters, which measure 30 feet long by 7 feet wide and are 4 feet deep, will be filled with native plants suggested by members of the PHS.

In an area of 8,000 square feet of impervious street and sidewalk, infiltration of the runoff was not feasible. The project’s goal was to manage 1 inch of runoff, to let it underdrain and slowly release back into the combined sewer.

Photo: Meliora Environmental Design LLC
Above and Below: Planter boxes receive roof runoff.

At the dedication ceremony for the project, Joanne Dahme, watersheds program manager in the PWD, noted that, in South Philadelphia, “during intense storms with three to four inches of rain in one hour, the sewers fill to capacity and they cannot relieve themselves the way they are designed to in the river. They are backing up in basements.”

The planters will be in the neighborhood of Columbus Square Playground. The project, which will include a rain garden at 12th and Wharton Streets, was funded by a $300,000 grant from Pennsylvania’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

Also in development is the Liberty Lands Park, which combines stormwater management with the park’s master plan. Located behind a new multipurpose deck/stage will be a rain garden to accept diverted street runoff and flow from within the park itself.

“Due to site conditions, the rain garden is lined and does not allow infiltration,” says Crockett. “Water is first directed into a cistern for site irrigation, and, once the cistern is full, is slowly released into the existing combined sewer system.”

Philadelphia Green and PWD’s Cliveden Park project in East Mount Airy involved working with the city’s Department of Recreation and nearby residents and other members of the Friends of Cliveden Park. The group wanted to improve the existing rain garden, and the Philadelphia Water Department wanted the project as part of its overall efforts to manage stormwater in the Tookany/Tacony-Frankford (TTF) Watershed.

Street runoff from new street inlets was diverted into this city park, and then discharged on one side of the park into a series of stepped rain gardens or stone walls. Adding these rain gardens and stone walls at points of natural depression slows runoff flow down across the sloping park land. The runoff is directed into an existing wetland garden.

Runoff from the other road discharges directly into the wetland garden. An existing outlet structure at the park’s lowest point was modified to allow extended detention, with slow release to avoid prolonged periods of ponding. The stepped rain gardens and stone walls not only solved the stormwater runoff problem, but also enhanced the aesthetic appeal of
Cliveden Park.

Philadelphia Green and PWD created another joint stormwater project near the city’s historic Blue Bell Inn. There, three streets surround what was a vacant triangle of land. PWD wanted an early action project in the Cobbs Creek watershed.

Fairmount Park staff members and the park’s Friends group were also agreeable to the project. Philadelphia Green brought these groups together and created, with help from Meliora Environmental Design: Consulting Engineers, a space of natural beauty that pulls stormwater from the surrounding streets.

The Waterview Recreation Center stormwater project in Germantown is part of the TTF Watershed. Its goal was to manage 1 inch of runoff from a large impervious area: 12,340 square feet of street and sidewalk and 1,030 square feet of rooftop.

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This was accomplished by adding three LID strategies. A 2-foot-by-100-foot infiltration tree trench parallels the sidewalk. The sidewalk was replaced with 310 feet of porous concrete. Storage volume for the two LID features totals 1,032 cubic feet. The infiltration rate is 4.5 inches per hour. The 2-foot-by-64-foot flow-through planter box handles runoff from the roof.

PWD has partnered with the city’s Recreation and Parks Departments in demonstrating the use of porous asphalt for basketball courts. “These demonstrations have led to a greater level of comfort with a previously unfamiliar material and are intended to lead to a change in standards for future recreational court construction,” says Crockett. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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swamptroll

March 4th, 2010 8:28 AM PT

This is a great article, but I would have liked to have seen some sort of discussion of the process that the city is undergoing with the EPA to approve their new Long Term Combined Sewer Control Plan Update. This is an integral part of the discussion for implementation of green infrastructure across the country. As noted in the article, the regulatory science has not kept up pace with the desire to implement these BMP's, and this problem is where Green Infrastructure advocates need to focus their attention.

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