Buyers Guide 2010

Structural Stormwater BMPs

Best management practices for treating and managing runoff

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Photo: Utah DOT

By Janet Aird

2 Comments


Woodcrest Project
When developers Miller & Smith built Woodcrest, a community of 81 housing units on 47 acres in Clarksburg, MD, they faced strict water-quality regulations.

“The site is on a special protection area; it’s very sensitive,” says Glenn Fritz, president of Deneau Construction in Gaithersburg, MD, which installed the development’s water treatment and infiltration system in 2008.

The community is in densely populated Montgomery County, MD, which requires post-development stormwater runoff from new development to equal predevelopment stormwater runoff conditions. The county also requires advanced filtration and groundwater recharge. In addition, Woodcrest is located next to the 3,700-acre Little Bennett Regional Park. Runoff drains into the Little Bennett and Seneca Creeks, and from there, into the environmentally sensitive Chesapeake Bay.

Brian Lewandowski of Gutschick, Little and Weber designed the system. Because the site had no room for typical recharge ponds, the treated runoff had to be stored underground. He used StormChambers from HydroLogic Solutions to control stormwater runoff and remove sediment and nutrients, as well as Contech Stormwater Solutions’ StormFilter, which removes oil and grease, dissolved heavy metals, herbicides, and pesticides.

StormChambers are made of HDPE and have an open bottom to allow water to recharge into the ground. When three models of the chambers—start, middle, and end—are placed in interconnecting rows, they capture stormwater, hold the solids, treat the water, and allow it to seep into the ground, recharging the groundwater and maintaining base flow to streams and wetlands.

Photo: Eriksson Engineering
Installing the bottom units of the DoubleTrap system
“They’re basically the same thing as a septic system,” says Lewandowski. A biomat of microorganisms forms on the soil and stone under the chambers, metabolizing and converting pollutants and nutrients to noncontaminating byproducts.

StormChamber units also can be used instead of pipe to convey stormwater by placing the middle chambers end to end. “This is the first time we’ve put in StormChamber units,” says Fritz. “They were light and easy to install, and they didn’t require large equipment.”

Crews dug trenches, some of them up to 14 feet deep, and then lined the bottoms with aggregate topped with a geotextile netting. The netting allows water to infiltrate while preventing it from eroding the underlying stone and soil.

The crews then installed the start, middle, and end chambers as well as StormChamber SedimenTraps, units that catch sediment that runs into the chambers. The trenches were backfilled with more stone to 6 inches above the chambers, topped with nonwoven filter fabric, and backfilled with soil. Sediment that accumulates within the SedimenTraps is removed with a vacuum truck through a 10-inch riser pipe centered above the SedimenTrap.

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About 75 units are installed in roughly 11 different locations at Woodcrest, Fritz says, all of them under green areas. Each unit is 34.04 inches high, 5 feet wide, and either 7.6 or 8.1 feet long, depending on the model, and can handle 10 cubic feet of water per linear foot. Each has a side portal that can accept up to a 12-inch inflow pipe and a top portal for clean out.

“Some StormChamber units catch runoff from roof drains and others from the streets after the water is treated,” says Fritz. Water from roof downspouts is sent directly to a StormChamber system. Water from the streets, which contains oil and heavy metals from cars, flows into storm drains to a StormFilter, which provides direct filtration. From there it goes to a StormChamber system. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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stormtrap09

May 29th, 2009 1:28 PM PT

When the need for a watertight application is required, a liner is used to provide a watertight seal around StormTrap units. When installed correctly; use of pipe boots, double-sided tape, band clamp, hot-air welder (if necessary), watertightness is achieved easily with the liner application. The same application is frequently used in the wastewater treatment industry to provide watertight applications where the potential for leakage and subsequent contamination is of the utmost concern. More information pertaining to the liners referenced above can be found at www.btlliners.com. Also, please feel free to contact myself at www.stormtrap.com Thanks, Brian Stahl P.E.

eclon

May 20th, 2009 11:33 AM PT

The StormTrap structure is not watertight. StormTrap requires wrapping with a liner in order to retain/detain stormwater. Use of a liner is problematic because of the difficulty in maintaining a watertight seal at any pipe connection.

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