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What is Green Infrastructure ?. Khris Dodson, Environmental Finance Center. November 17, 2010. Why use Green Infrastructure?. Stormwater /combined sewer benefits Eliminates pollutants at the source
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What is Green Infrastructure? Khris Dodson, Environmental Finance Center November 17, 2010
Why use Green Infrastructure? Stormwater/combined sewer benefits • Eliminates pollutants at the source • Reduces discharge volumes to creeks, rivers, lakes, and Wastewater Treatment Facilities • Reduces flooding Provides other benefits to the community & environment • Reduces consumption, Gray O&M costs, energy and heat island effects • Improves neighborhood aesthetics, habitat, biodiversity, and air quality • Can be less disruptive than large Gray Infrastructure projects • Green Infrastructure is often more cost-effective than Gray Infrastructure
Water Quality Suffers • 80%of pollution to the aquatic environment comes from land-based sources, such as runoff pollution. • New York has identified nonpoint sources as the primary cause of water quality problems in 91% of its priority waterbodies • Once a watershed’s impervious cover exceeds 20%, water quality suffers
Combined Sewer Overflows • In 1994, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) adopted a Combined Sewer Overflow Control Policy designed to reduce and eliminate combined sewer overflows nationwide. The purpose of the CSO Control Policy was to elaborate on the 1989 EPA CSO Control Strategy and to facilitate compliance with Clean Water Act (CWA) requirements. • The three objectives of the 1989 CSO Control Strategy are: • Ensure that if CSOs occur, they are only as a result of wet weather. • Bring all wet weather CSO discharge points into compliance with the technology-based and water-quality-based requirements of the CWA. • Minimize the impacts of CSOs on water quality, aquatic biota and human health.
Catch Basin Dry Weather Flow During dry weather, sanitary flows are collected in combined sewers for treatment at Wastewater treatment facilities CombinedSewer SanitarySewer Creek Interceptor Sewer to Wastewater Treatment Facility
Roof Leaders Stormwater Runoff Catch Basin Combined Sewer Overflow During wet weather, inflows exceed the collection system’s capacity and trigger a CSO CombinedSewer SanitarySewer Creek Interceptor Sewer to Wastewater Treatment Facility
Roof Leader Stormwater Runoff Porous Roadway Dry Weather Flow Green solutions intercept and reduce stormwater flows to sewers, providing storage, infiltration, and treatment Vegetated Swale SanitarySewer Combined Sewer Creek Interceptor Sewer to Wastewater Treatment Facility
Paradigm Shift: • Rain is a Resource! • Shift from the curb, gutter and big basin approach to the way mother nature would manage stormwater • Region or watershed Neighborhood Site
From Traditional to Integrated Traditional Integrated Drainage Systems Reactive (solve problems) Engineer-driven Protect property Pipe and Convey Limited Community consultation Local Government Ownership Extreme Storm Focus Peak Flow Thinking! Ecosystems Proactive (prevent problems) Interdisciplinary Team-driven Protect Property and Habitat Mimic Natural Processes Extensive Consultation Partnerships with Others Rainwater Integrated with Land Use Volume-based Thinking!
Integrated Design • Integration of seemingly unrelated aspects of building design and/or construction • Key: Collaboration of people from different disciplines throughout the design process • Goal: to achieve high performance and multiple benefits What if we looked at Stormwater Planning through this lens?
Green Infrastructure improves: • Water quality • Air quality • Neighborhood aesthetics • Habitat and biodiversity • Recreational and transportation opportunities • Property values • Community health and vitality
Green infrastructure reduces…. • Flooding • Erosion • Stormwater runoff volume • Stormwater pollutant loadings • CSOs • Gray infrastructure operation, maintenance, energy and treatment costs
Rain Gardens Bioswales Rain Barrels
Green Roofs Walters Hall, SUNY ESF
Porous Pavements New porous parking lot at Dunbar Center in Syracuse
Want to know more? • US EPA’s Green Infrastructure website: www.epa.gov/greeninfrastructure • NYS Department of Environmental Protection: http://www.dec.ny.gov/chemical/8468.html • Save the Rain Website: www.savetherain.us Center for Watershed Protection: http://www.cwp.org/
Contact me: Khris Dodson Communications and Program Manager Environmental Finance Center 315-443-8818 kdodson@syracusecoe.org