November-December 2009

Restoring a Link to Nature

On the fast track with South Los Angeles Wetlands Park

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This Avalon Boulevard area in South Los Angeles will be transferred into a wetland park.

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By David C. Richardson

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Bottom Feeders and Larvae Eaters
As specified in Psomas’s preliminary design report, the wetlands will comprise three individual cells covering a total area of between 4 and 4.5 acres. According to the report, the division of a constructed wetland into individual cells increases the treatment efficiency and may also allow for easier repairs, cleanout, and general maintenance. At high water level, the total volume is 7.5 acre-feet. To prevent groundwater infiltration, the treatment area will be contained within a clay liner.

 Although the facility will be designed to manage an average baseflow of 80,000 gpd, to achieve maximum treatment, Vargas says, “We’re putting in systems to divert the entire dry-weather flow into the wetlands. We’re breaking into the pipe, and all of that runoff that’s running in the very bottom of the pipe—the very low-flow—we’re diverting to the wetland.”

Photo: Psomas
Public access will allow people to learn about native habitat and species.
Photo: Psomas
The new 9-acre park will treat runoff from more than 500 acres of the surrounding community.

During this low-flow regime, water captured from the storm drain will pass through a hydraulic separator to remove grease and particulates. The pretreated water will then be pumped up and discharged at the headworks of the wetland.

During the high-flow regime surrounding a storm event, a larger pump and diversion system will direct a flow of up to 16 cubic feet per second to the headworks, filling out the wetland to its maximum extent of 4 to 4.5 acres to achieve a treatment volume of 2.1 acre-feet.

“We can divert water very quickly out of the storm drain and get the most polluted water, the first flush, into the wetland very quickly, and then we can shut the pumps down and let the wetland’s biological process take its time as that water is slowly discharged,” says Vargas.

After passing through the wetland with a residency period of between 50 and 120 days, the water will exit the wetland at the western portion of cell 3 through an outlet structure and discharge into the storm drain main in San Pedro Street.

“The way the hydrology of the basin works, currently, all of the water that we will be treating onsite would have bypassed the site, because it’s already in the storm drain,” says Vargas. With the new design, however, “We take out as much as we can and fill the wetland. That gives us our treatment volume; when that is full, everything else goes by like it did before. You don’t want to wash your wetland out.

 “After about 6 inches have discharged back into the storm drain,” continues Vargas, “the pumps will be reactivated, filling that portion back up” with the remaining storm flow.

Vector control, of course, is an important design consideration for any constructed wetland. Saldin says keeping the water moving is the key to controlling pests such as mosquitoes. “That is a question of maintaining drainage inflow and outflow so that there is never a condition that the water would be stagnant.”

According to Saldin, 72 hours is the longest period of time the water can remain standing before there is the risk of a vector problem. “This design would not allow for the flow to stop for anything near that long,” he says.

Tam says vector control experts, whom he consulted, confirmed the design would meet mosquito control requirements. Nevertheless, Tam says, “We’ll probably take the precaution of putting in mosquito fish to help out by eating the larvae.”

The upland areas will be landscaped with “native high-desert type vegetation that will require about a third of the irrigation that would normally be required by a public park with turfed lawns,” says Vargas, and, as a result, the park’s irrigation requirements will be minimal. Next Page >

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