January-February 2010

Shoring up Shoal Creek

A comprehensive attempt to revitalize an urban park in Austin, relies on measures to stabilize an eroding stream channel, better manage stormwater onsite, and restore the park landscape.

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By Jeffrey S Kessel

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Shoal Creek, in Austin, TX, runs through Pease Park, a popular recreational area near the campus of the University of Texas. Like many urban streams, Shoal Creek exhibits problems related to flooding, erosion, and degraded water quality. Seeking to address these ailments where they occur within the park, the city of Austin is pursuing a comprehensive set of integrated solutions intended to stabilize the stream channel, better manage stormwater, and restore heavily degraded riparian zones. Overall, the project is intended to restore the health of the creek and improve the park experience for all visitors.

Heavy public use has taken its toll on significant sections of the park, including riparian areas. Home to a popular disc golf course, the park sometimes attracts hundreds of players on a single day. The resulting foot traffic has caused extensive erosion, soil compaction, and loss of vegetation, leading to increased sediment loads in Shoal Creek. Other problems to be addressed within the park include channel instability, bank erosion, degraded stream habitat, hillside erosion, dog wastes, and stormwater runoff from neighboring properties.

In September 2008, the city of Austin hired the consulting engineering firm PBS&J to design and prioritize a series of measures to address the problems within Pease Park. The following firms assisted PBS&J with this task: Glenrose Engineering Inc., HVJ Associates Inc., Frank Lam & Associates Inc., MWM Design Group, Landmark Surveying Inc., and Winterowd Associates. After conducting field investigations to identify trees, define soils, and delineate and characterize the creek’s riparian corridor, PBS&J conducted hydrologic and hydraulic analyses to develop preliminary design solutions to stabilize the streambank and channel along approximately one mile of Shoal Creek. Meanwhile, the project team designed 11 “green infrastructure” projects—including biofiltration ponds, flow spreaders, a rain garden, and a pervious parking lot—to treat runoff that enters Shoal Creek untreated and unmanaged from approximately 100 acres of nearby developed land. Measures to stabilize and restore roughly 32 acres of riparian corridor and parkland also were developed.

Photo: PBS&J
Displaying some of the worst bank erosion within Pease Park, this section of Shoal Creek includes high, unstable, unvegetated banks.
Photo: PBS&J
The park’s hike-and-bike trail generally follows Shoal Creek, providing a commuter route as well as access to the various playing fields and other recreation areas.

Setting Multiple Restoration Goals
A greenbelt recreational area, the 43-acre Pease Park mostly extends in a linear fashion along the banks of Shoal Creek, a flashy, flood-prone urban waterway that was once a spring-fed, perennial creek. The hike-and-bike trail that generally follows the creek provides a commuter route, as well as access to the various playing fields and other recreation areas. Given its proximity to Austin’s urban center and its various amenities, the park attracts numerous visitors engaged in activities that are not available at other nearby parks. For example, an 18-hole disc golf course extends among the trees and across Shoal Creek. Part of the park is designated a “leash-free” zone where dogs are allowed to roam. Additional features include three sand volleyball courts, a wading pool, and an area with concrete picnic tables long enough to seat at least 200 people.

The park encompasses a wide range of terrain and vegetation, including open fields, grassed meadows, and shaded woodlands along Shoal Creek. However, the increasing popularity of the park has led to severe ecological damage in many locations. Essentially, Pease Park is being “loved to death” by its many users.

Although some areas of the park receive little human foot traffic, other sections have been trampled to the point that the grass, forb, and understory vegetation is gone. Without these root systems, the soils have eroded, and in many areas only the sturdiest trees remain, surrounded by stony ground. Large and small trees located along the disc golf course display significant bark damage as a result of the sport. Throughout the park, exotic and invasive grasses, shrubs, cane, and trees encroach upon the habitat of native plants.

Meanwhile, Shoal Creek itself has experienced significant degradation, the result of upstream development that has sent increasing amounts of stormwater runoff to the waterway. All told, Shoal Creek extends approximately 9.5 miles from its headwaters to its junction with Lady Bird Lake on the Colorado River in downtown Austin. The stretch of Shoal Creek that passes through Pease Park is about 1.3 stream miles from the mouth of the stream. As a result, most of the nearly 13-square-mile Shoal Creek watershed contributes to the reach that extends through the park.

This relatively long and narrow watershed is highly urbanized and fully developed, exemplified by its 50% to 60% impervious cover. The resulting increase in runoff has caused significant widening and degradation of the creek within Pease Park in recent decades. Meanwhile, older neighborhoods located immediately adjacent to the park were built before the city of Austin implemented its requirements for managing stormwater. As a result, the neighborhoods feature curb-and-gutter systems that whisk runoff into storm drains that discharge directly into Shoal Creek.

Faced with these problems, the city seeks to restore as many of the park’s beneficial uses as possible. By stabilizing the stream channel and installing innovative measures for managing stormwater onsite, the city aims to improve its water quality. By restoring native vegetation throughout the park, the city intends to reduce erosion, increase the habitat value of the park, and improve the park’s aesthetic appearance. Next Page >

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