Buyers Guide 2010

Keeping a LID on Runoff

Low-impact development mimics natures handling of water.

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Photo: Sara Cohen, Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation

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By Janis Keating

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Keeping more rain on each site and out of municipal stormwater systems also has benefits. “This could lower capacity, so we don’t have to build all this infrastructure,” says Weinstein. “LID is not the answer to everything, but if there’s the option for everyone taking responsibility for their own area, that’s a step in the right direction.” Many technologies can help accomplish LID’s goals: “Who’d heard of a green roof 10 years ago? Now it’s cheaper to have one, and people will build what’s cheaper, especially since many roofs are already structurally built for green roofs.”

Unfortunately, money isn’t always being put where the mouths are. “People are asking for instant answers, but the nation’s not putting money into looking into these options,” adds Weinstein. “People are fighting for research dollars everywhere. Who’s really putting R&D [research and development] into retention cells? The only way something like this gets done is if someone thinks it up in his basement.” However, ideas can, and do, come from anywhere: “Engineers are designing rain gardens. Landscapers suggest more useful plants or soil mix. We can recycle items one would never think of using for stormwater. For example, the blasting sand left over after cleaning railroad car wheels—it’s mainly iron oxides, which attract pollutants. The trouble is, maybe some of these workable ideas don’t fit standard BMP codes, and it can take years and money to change minds and codes.”

Photo: Chip Hatter Photographics
This beautiful expanse of lawn can also serve as a parking area.
The Low Impact Development Center positions itself as a clearinghouse for this type of information. “We’re a nationwide group of seven people, and we have an office in California that will grow,” says Weinstein. “Stormwater has to be looked at as an economic and business model; the most effective type or design of permeable pavement in Chicago may not be the right one for Oregon.”

Weinstein believes LID has advantages. “It gives us the ability to look at things holistically, to save infrastructure. Maybe it will help create green jobs. And, although it can be implemented nationally, or state by state, it has benefits even at the local level; each ‘little’ project helps. For example, some counties are subsidizing homeowners for installing permeable driveways and rain gardens. If you explain the concept to Joe and Jane Homeowner, they can ‘get’ it; if you tell them that putting a rain garden in their yard will reduce their stormwater costs by, say, $20 a month, they’ll start digging! Having neighborhoods dotted with rain gardens is much cheaper than building new infrastructure.”

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Natural State—Only “Natural” Products?
Does nature always have the “best” way of solving a problem—or, since people often caused the drainage problem, is it our job to devise a solution? An increasing number of manufacturers in the stormwater industry say “yes” to the latter: Manufactured products can do an equal, or sometimes better, job than land-based systems. To promote this message, the industry has created the Stormwater Equipment Manufacturers Association (SWEMA). Formed in 2008, the groups members are producers of stormwater devices—many of them competitors now working together to provide a voice for the industry and to lobby for such things as standard testing procedures and proper maintenance of stormwater BMPs.

“I’ve been trying to get SWEMA going for five years, since someone at a StormCon conference said it was a good idea,” says John Moll, CEO of Atlanta, GA’s CrystalStream Technologies. “I don’t mind selling against others in my field; our products are different. But the ‘enemy’ was state codes. If an engineer brings in the specs for a certain stormwater product, whether or not the item really works, it has to be put in. Our point is that no one understands how natural items, such as ponds, work—there are no maintenance records.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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tjm@bmpinc.com

June 30, 2009 8:41 AM PT

The writer above gives only half the story... Without proper maintenance, any BMP can re-suspend captured materials, bypass or not. A properly designed structure for a SNOUT (e.g. a deep sump) will limit re-suspension, and cleaning when sump hits half full condition will help further. Majority of floatables are retained no matter. BMP's Bio-Skirt can be added for extra oil retention or reduce bacteria if needed. But note that nearly 40,000 SNOUTs have been installed around the USA, and more go in everyday. It is a MADE in USA product that is affordable and effective. By the way, it's easy to put in a bypass structure for a SNOUT at the end of a pipe run, but unit shown is in an inlet where bypass is not feasible. See bmpinc.com for SNOUT with bypass if interested.

tdawson@dupageco.org

June 9th, 2009 1:47 PM PT

A catch basin with a baffle or a "Snout" is an example of a BMP that can resuspend all settled solids, and discharge oils and floatables collected in the first flush or months earlier. A bypass system, like in the CatchAll, Grate Gator, Stormceptor, Downstream Defender, etc. is needed.

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