September 2008

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Ferndale Preserve Gets a Permeable Parking Lot

Infiltrating stormwater at a new Florida recreation area

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The parking lot of the preserve needs to accommodate heavy horse trailers.

By Carol Brzozowski

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The installation of a permeable surface in a parking area at a newly developed Florida recreation spot is helping park managers provide an aesthetically pleasing look to the lot, while providing optimal onsite stormwater retention.

Ferndale Preserve is a 192-acre park in Ferndale, FL, located on the western shore of Lake Apopka in the central part of the state. The park, which is slated to open around the beginning of 2009, has three trails that offer vistas of Lake Apopka: a 2.5-mile nature and hiking trail, a 2.9-mile equestrian trail, and a 1.6-mile unpaved multipurpose trail. On a clear day, one can see downtown Orlando.

The former orange grove is being restored to a long-leaf pine and wiregrass ecosystem. Long-needled and large-coned trees characterize such an ecosystem with wiregrass as primary ground cover on a sand hill system with native wildflowers dispersed throughout.

“If you’ve ever driven through part of the Ocala National Forest, that’s what it would look like with sparsely populated tall trees,” says Tom Eicher, manager of parks and trails for Lake County. “Although these aren’t going to start that way, that’s what we’re aiming for.”

Ferndale Preserve’s history dates back before the 1940s, when the land had been converted into a citrus grove. Part of it had been used for a truck farm in the 1940s, says Eicher.

“The property was basically agricultural, so everything that originally had been there had been wiped out,” he explains.

Grass grows through the spaces in the porous mat.

At Ferndale Preserve, visitors may be able to spot one of 110 species birds; 40 types of butterflies; animals such as the pine snake, gopher tortoise, bobcat, river otter, American alligator, box turtle, and fence lizard; and many native plants, including an endangered small tree species, the silver buckthorn.

Plans call for a fishing pier and observation tower on Lake Apopka, a scenic pavilion overlook and a short boardwalk through the wet deciduous woodland.

The county has several goals before opening the park, including establishing portable sanitation and building an education pavilion. It also wants to establish grass in the parking area, which was surfaced with 26,000 square feet of Soil Retentions’ Drivable Grass.

Drivable Grass, a concrete-based flexible and permeable pavement product, allows stormwater to filter through into the subsurface. In areas such as Florida, which can be prone to drought, the stormwater is retained on the property and in Florida’s high water table.

The product is designed to flex and conform to irregular ground surface contours along predefined linear grooves. Root penetration takes place through premanufactured holes and cracks down into the subgrade soil.

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The mat’s porous nature allows moisture to filter into the underlying soil, increasing onsite stormwater storage, and minimizing offsite water flow.

“Last summer, when it was wicked hot, our contractors put the Drivable Grass down. They did everything they were supposed to do: They hydroseeded it, they watered it a couple of times,” says Eicher. “But they didn’t water enough, waiting for summer rains, and we never got them last year. Then we did get some [rain]—all of a sudden, we got two inches in two hours and the hydroseeding washed away. Next Page >

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