Buyers Guide '09

The Changing World of Stormwater Technology

Software and tools for modeling and program management

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By Dan Rafter

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The project was an important one: Drew Gangnes and his fellow engineers had built five green roofs scattered throughout downtown Seattle. The goal: to see how much rainwater runoff the roofs prevented from hitting the streets of the city and entering Seattle’s system of stormwater sewers.

Gangnes and his team needed accurate data. They needed to know exactly how many inches of rain landed on each roof and how much of that rainfall became runoff. Inaccurate data would render the experiment’s results useless.

The team turned to Bourne, MA–based Onset Computer Corporation. The manufacturer of weather stations and data loggers has long provided its software and technology to engineers working in the stormwater industry, engineers who need accurate rainfall data. The engineers from Seattle’s Magnusson Klemencic Associates, where Gangnes works, relied on Onset’s data loggers from February 2005 until January 2007, when they officially ended their project.

Gangnes, director of civil engineering with Magnusson Klemencic, says the data loggers not only provided accurate information, but also saved his team valuable time.

“With the loggers, we were able to get a snapshot each month of the rain that fell and the runoff that came from each roof,” he says. “We did this for two years. We were able to analyze our data for each month and then for each quarter. It helped us convey very effectively the results of our study.”

A whole industry of software and technology products has sprouted up to serve stormwater professionals. Engineers can work with data loggers, hydraulic modeling programs, systems that help monitor water quality, and pipe-inspection equipment and software. They can even purchase software that helps them make sense of the stormwater permitting systems spelled out by the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Phase II regulations.

The good news is that technology providers are constantly working on new products and software. And this is a trend that few in the field—whether engineers or technology manufacturers—see ending any time soon.

“We are selling more software than we ever have,” says Rick Masters, senior developer for Beaumont, TX–based CBI Systems Ltd., a provider of software designed to help municipalities, developers, and engineers manage and develop programs to meet their NPDES Phase II requirements.

“I think it’s taken at least four or five years for the people in the stormwater industry to figure out that they must have a database to keep track of all the construction-site inspection and recordkeeping,” Masters says. “It gets cumbersome in a hurry. After two or three years, they start compiling a pretty large list of construction sites and inspection records. They then realize that some sort of electronic centralized record system is needed. That is what is happening now.”

And CBI Systems isn’t the only provider recognizing the willingness of stormwater pros to turn to new software and technology.

“Our clients are getting savvier all the time when it comes to technology,” says Colby Manwaring, president of XP Software in Portland, OR, a company that makes software for urban drainage and stormwater modeling. “Several years ago, people would do their studies by hand. Then it moved to spreadsheet-type models. Now they are using modeling software. People are realizing that it’s not that difficult to use programs like ours. The systems are accessible to non-technical engineers. You can get your hands on these tools and do a very professional job without spending a lot of time or money.

“People are seeing the value in this,” Manwaring adds. “And their clients are starting to expect that level and detail of analysis from them. The numerical modeling segment of this industry will only continue to grow.”

Fortunately, for stormwater pros, the modeling segment is far from the only technology group that is constantly working to create new programs designed to help engineers do their work better and faster.

Green Roofs in Seattle
In Seattle, Magnusson Klemencic Associates are no strangers to stormwater technology. The company’s recent experience with Onset Computer Corporation’s rainfall data loggers only reinforced its commitment to new stormwater technology.

Photo: @iStockphoto.com/bibikoff

Working with local contractors, Magnusson Klemencic engineers designed five green roof test plots, each measuring 8 feet by 12 feet, in downtown Seattle. Each plot featured a different thickness of planting media and different species of plants. The goal was to see which roof swallowed the most rainfall before it became stormwater runoff.

The problem was, engineers faced a real challenge when it came time to measure the amount of runoff leaving the test plots.

“Measuring temperature and wind speed—all that is connected to a data logger. Those things are all pretty straightforward. We’ve been measuring those parameters for some time,” Gangnes says. “What we scratched our heads about was how we were going to measure the runoff leaving the different test plots.”

The solution that engineers came up with was elegant in its simplicity. They angled each plot in two directions so that the rainwater would ultimately filter into a corner drain. That drain was then outfitted with two devices: a simple water meter and an orifice restrictor device.

Engineers then used a pressure transducer to measure the depth of water over time. They used that information to determine how much water flowed from the green roofs. Finally, they relied on Onset’s logging software to reduce the data and determine runoff trends from it.

“Using Onset’s programs to do the logging worked very well for us,” Gangnes says. “We built additional routines into their program to help us take the data and use it once it was in the Onset format.”

The pilot program determined that green roofs did a rather remarkable job of mitigating stormwater runoff. The top-performing plot mitigated 94% of the rain that landed on it. Even the least effective of the five test plots prevented 65% of the rain that fell on it from entering Seattle’s stormwater sewer system.

There were some initially surprising results, though. The top-performing green roof was 6 inches deep with plants and planting materials. It was little surprise that this roof performed better than did a 2-inch-deep green roof and a pair of 4-inch-deep roofs.

But the 6-inch-deep roof also mitigated more runoff than did the deepest roof in the test program, one that featured 8 inches of plants and planting material.

Fortunately, the project called for soil moisture probes, too, which allowed engineers to chart the ebb and flow of water in the soil over time. The difference, they saw, was that the 6-inch-deep plot was the only one with a granular drainage course. The rest of the roofs featured cellular drainage boards.

Once rainfall hit the other roofs’ cellular drainage boards, it immediately began running off. The 6-inch-deep roof’s pumice-like drainage board, on the other hand, held the rainwater in place longer.

Engineers also discovered during the test program that the thinner roofs dried out more quickly following heavy rainfalls. The 6-inch-deep plot, then, didn’t hold water deep in its soil as long as did the 8-inch plot.

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“We hadn’t thought through the fact that you can get soil that is too thick for optimal stormwater performance,” Gangnes explains.

The green roof experiment wasn’t done just for show. Gangnes hopes that the program’s results help convince local governments to explore adding green roofs to their municipalities’ stormwater collection systems, especially in a decentralized fashion. Next Page >

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