October 2009

Permeable Pavers

Part 2. Putting pavers to work

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Photo: Mark Hadley of W & H Pacific

By Carol Brzozowski

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Part 1: Choosing products and installation methods

Whether it’s interlocking concrete pavers, drivable grass, or recycled tires, permeable pavement is becoming a best management practice of choice for many seeking to address water-quality concerns. Permeable pavement can also fulfill some Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) and other sustainability requirements.

Another benefit: Not only is permeable pavement doing its job with regard to water quality and quantity, but it also is adding aesthetic value to property.

Adding Parking, Not Sewer Connections
The Heroes Gym was recently constructed at the site of an old, run-down YWCA building in South Dallas, TX, in an area targeted for revitalization. Mark Cuban, owner of the National Basketball Association’s Dallas Mavericks and the Heroes Foundation, funded the renovation of building the into a new basketball center for youth.

But the site was not up to code, and to develop the gym, 30 more parking spaces were needed to meet zoning requirements. The only area where parking could be added was in a wooded field without storm sewer connections.

Photo: O’Donald Engineering
The site of Heroes Gym was originally not up to code, and to develop the gym, 30 more parking spaces were needed to meet zoning requirements.

Adding the connections would have been cost-prohibitive, says David Greer, an engineer in training for O’Donald Engineering. Additionally, the parking area was uphill from a residential property.

To address both parking and storm sewer concerns, O’Donald Engineering chose Invisible Structures’ Gravelpave2, based on a seminar the company had presented. Gravelpave2 is

manufactured of porous geotextile fabric that is molded to a 1-inch-high integrated ring and grid system. It is placed on top a porous base course, anchored with galvanized anchors, and filled with decorative gravel.  

Invisible Structures also makes Grasspave2, a porous system consisting of a sandy gravel base course, Hydrogrow polymer-fertilizer mixture, a ring and grid structure, sharp concrete sand, and grass seed or sod.

“Grasspave2 will disperse the point load of a tire or a fire truck outrigger, take the point load and spread it out into the base course, so it will do a similar effect to what any surface paving will do,” says Dustin Glist of Invisible Structures. “Gravelpave2 will hold aggregate inside the void space in the cylinders and disperse the load to an underlying porous base course.”

Both products remain porous throughout their lifetime, Glist adds.

“The Gravelpave2 is filled with open-graded aggregate uniform in size, such as a small quarter-inch gravel, that remains in the product itself, and when you drive over it, it inhibits rutting and washboarding that you normally see with gravel surface,” he says.

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O’Donald Engineering prepared a report for South Dallas, which approved the use of Gravelpave2. “We got our permit, and that saved us from having to put in a storm sewer system and having to go through a lengthy process to get that unit approved by the city,” says Greer. “It saved quite a bit of money.”

Greer points out that because the project was for a nonprofit organization, the budget was tight. Just as the project was underway, the economy started to falter. The budget was reduced to two-thirds of its original amount. Next Page >

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