September 2009

Volume-Based Hydrology

Examining the shift in focus from peak flows and pollution treatment to mimicking predevelopment volumes

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Photo: @iStockphoto.com/NevinGiesbrecht

By Andrew J. Reese

6 Comments


In addition, rumblings out of EPA lead us to believe that a volume-based approach will begin to replace other National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Phase II approaches in future permits. Such prescribed conditions might include mandated green approaches with measurable goals that specify acreage treated with green designs; mandated reduction of impervious area; total maximum daily load (TMDL) implementation through green infrastructure; and mandated capture and treat depths (e.g., 95% storm) with a hierarchy of controls: infiltration, evapotranspiration, and capture and reuse. West Virginia’s draft NPDES stormwater permit specifies capture of the first 1 inch of rainfall. Draft language offers an “offset” provision when the site cannot be developed with onsite VBH controls. Such offsets will allow investments in improvements in other areas of the same watershed or drainage area.

We are also finding that our current in-vogue measuring stick for controlling the water-quality and habitat-related impacts of urban development—percent imperviousness—is probably not doing the job. It is a very convenient, albeit indirect, measure of the potential intensity of urban-development-induced change in the natural hydrologic cycle. However, as some have noted, even when imperviousness is well controlled, there is no guarantee that a watershed or stream will be adequately protected or that its key values will be preserved. So, as a standard of measure of the problem it works well in an urban area, but as a standard of control  (i.e., “If we simply reduce imperviousness we have solved the problem”), it may be destined for partial retirement, joining “population density” and “curb miles.” A more direct approach is to attempt to account for rainfall-runoff volumes, and the flux of those volumes in time, directly.

What is VBH, Really?
Stormwater is measured in different ways, reflecting its different uses. Some use acre-feet; others use watershed-inches, gallons per minute, or cubic feet per second. A few still think in terms of cubic-feet-per-second-per-inch-per-square-mile! When water is precious—when it is a commodity—we almost always refer to it in volumetric terms. When it is a common enemy to be safely conveyed and channeled, we think of it in terms of flow. Water is becoming an increasingly precious commodity, even in the eastern United States where it has always seemed plentiful. This forces us to take a look at volumes over flow rates—where they come from, where they are stored, and how we access them. So it seems VBH is a water scarcity phenomenon.

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A similar application, the flip side of the coin, is the reduction of runoff volume to reduce combined sewer overflows through the use of green infrastructure (GI). Such approaches, many of which look a lot like old-fashioned stormwater treatment controls, both large- and small-scale, are coming into prominence.

Popular GI approaches span the horizon of volume-based practices. They include downspout disconnection, sheet-flow from small impervious areas to grass or gravel, filter strips, infiltration practices, small wetlands, porous pavements of all kinds, “leaky” pipe and node systems, cisterns and rain barrels, bioretention of all types and shapes, soil amendments, tree box filters, green roofs, vegetated swales (dry and wet), and extended detention. EPA has dedicated a complete Web site to this approach, and a whole industry is growing up around the concept. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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ktidid

November 24th, 2009 6:53 PM PT

I am a layperson and had to look up the word hydrology... so you know my brain level. Reading these posts is pretty awesome for me. I actually understood a lot of what you folks are saying. Not all. Nonetheless, I would like to ask a question and hope you don't mind. My landlord is very unhappy about some oil leaks my car is dropping and says the environmental control inspector will fine him. I own a 23-year-old Cadillac, from the era when I was a hard worker but am now disabled where walking is difficult and painful and have doc's verification of that. It will cost $1,000 to pull down the transmission to replace the gaskets which are leaking, and I have had an aluminum pan put under the car to catch the drips when it is parked. Plan to add some cloths which I am told will absorb oil. I live on Disability and am in a Federally subsized apartment. At the same time, I used to teach school, work at western bureau of Newsweek after interning there, and was employed by a state university to edit academic and professional documents intended for publication, and so I am urgently trying to find similar assignments on the net to pay for this vehicle expense. There is hope, you see, that I can deal with this properly. OK.. sorry for the detail. Could any of you give me advice so I won't be evicted if I don't get rid of my vehicle? They want to protect the streams and trees, and my area (an island in Puget Sound Washington) is subject to rather heavy rains. And if this is not appropriate to post here, please forgive me. Am trying to solve this problem intelligently. I cannot afford to get rid of the car; it is cheaper.. truly.. to try to maintain it. It is a good car. I truly sympathize with the need for stormwater control to protect the environment. Does this include the area under a handy-dandy overpass somewhere? O, I am being facetious.. hope u don't take that last blurt wrong. Thank you... and if you scold me for asking this here, I will understand.

cgorman1

November 9th, 2009 11:02 PM PT

I see a huge problem with this broad declaration, "Second, there is a growing body of knowledge that the treatment of runoff is not as effective as the removal of runoff (and the mass of pollutants it carries) needing treatment. We can theoretically assign some very high pollution removal...." How can you ignore the effect of these pollutants? The trees that uptake the pollutants, underground streams that are taking metals and substances other than suspended solids like sediment into downstream bodies of water. I've see treebox filters that die to heavy oil concentrations? How does that LID work? (1) I'm not sold on the low impact green solutions, unless there is some sort of interception (you can call it pretreatment) of the potentially hazardous stuff first. (2) What about eventual "removal" of that fouled soil or tree? Is your residential or commercial site now a superfund? Is the property owner going to want to remove and replace all of his "Low-Impact" systems only a few years after their commissioning? I hope people are paying attention to this, because honestly, I have seen failed enough ponds and bioretention facilities to make me want to put everything in an encapsulated system.

Nisenson

September 10th, 2009 6:13 AM PT

Great article. From an urban planning persective it seems like site - level LID can address Objectives 1 and 2 (infiltrated flows and pollutant removal). Objectives 4 & 5 (Destructive flows and Biggest Flows to Consider) are most practically handled at the muni and regional levels. I see Objective 3 (Channel Protection) as the real challenge. Some development projects (high dollar, condusive regs) will have no problem, while others (communities that were bypassed by the last boom) struggle to attract attention with lesser requirements. This is where communities need to fashion programs that call in all the troops - CIP, economic development, parks, etc... to see how to handle on a community basis and streamline to attract investment.

afischer

September 9th, 2009 9:33 AM PT

More attention needs to be put on what to do with the captured volume and how it is disposed (lost) in the interim period between storm events. It does little good to capture and retain pollutants only to have the stored volume overflow in the second, third, or fourth storm event. Losses of that volume by way of infiltration, evapotranspiration, and use for irrigation will vary by geology, climate, and landscaping practices (xeriscaping would seem counterproductive during winter months in the Southwest since irrigating - as a way to lose the stored volume - at that time is generally unneccessary). The loss problem has been long recognized in wastewater storage from confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs).

DBeyerlein

August 12th, 2009 1:27 PM PT

The author makes a good argument in favor of the need for volume-based hydrology. Similar approaches are being used in Washington state and California where the standard is flow-duration based to prevent an increase in erosive flows. However, the use of single-event hydrologic modeling does not do a good job in accurately quantifying the ability of onsite stormwater solutions (e.g., LID facilities) to mitigate the extra stormwater volume created by land development. A more accurate way to do this is with continuous simulation hydrologic modeling. This is because what occurs between storm events is just as important as what happens during storm events. Only continuous simulation has the ability to accurately represent these hydrologic processes.

Robotuner

August 12th, 2009 7:32 AM PT

HSPFToolkit (http://www.engenious.com) allows users to compute (Log Pearson Type III) and extract volume based return frequencies from either precipitation or runoff generated time series created by HSPF. For example, you can compute a 100 year-7 day return volume from a time series, then extract the time series values that most closely matches that from the data record for use in your typical event model based applications.

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