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Big Darby Watershed Map. History National Scenic River Exceptional Warm Water Habitat and Cold Water Habitat Several Endangered Species 5-year Moratorium on Sanitary Sewer Extensions Lifted in October of 2006 EPA Construction Permit Effective Date: October 27, 2006. Groundwater Recharge Table Map.
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1. Modeling Annual Groundwater Recharge Using Recharge Wells to Meet Ohio EPA Requirements of the Darby Watershed Presented by
Doug Turney, PE, LEED AP
2. Big Darby Watershed Map HistoryNational Scenic RiverExceptional Warm Water Habitat and Cold Water HabitatSeveral Endangered Species5-year Moratorium on Sanitary Sewer Extensions Lifted in October of 2006EPA Construction Permit Effective Date: October 27, 2006
3. Groundwater Recharge Table Map
4. Table 1 Recharge Values
5. Table 2 Recharge Values
6. Groundwater Recharge Mitigation Example Problem
Existing Conditions Proposed Conditions
10 Acres Row Crop 10 Acres High Density Residential
Type C Soil Type C Soil
Table 2 Recharge Area Table 2 Recharge Area
Annual Recharge = 90 acre-in/yr Annual Recharge = 50 acre-in/yr
Preferred Mitigation Option is Land Use Mitigation
Convert 1 acre of Row Crop to Meadow yields 1.6 acre-in/yr of mitigation
How many acres of row crop must be converted to meadow to mitigate for 40
acre-in/yr of groundwater recharge?
25 acres !
7. Mitigation Alternatives Bioretention Basins
Use of the RECARGA model, developed by the University of Wisconsin, adaptable to Central Ohio
http://dnr.wi.gov/runoff/stormwater/technote.htm
Recharge Wells
EPA has approved the use of recharge wells
8. Recharge Well System Layout
9. How do you model a recharge well? Find a model that can produce a continuous hydrograph for at least a years worth of data
10. WINSLAMM by PV & Associates Models continuous rainfall
Uses small storm hydrology to estimate runoff volume, more accurate than TR-55 for small events
Produces a usable hydrograph output, 6, 15, 60-minute output intervals
11. Case Study 168-Acre Warehouse Development
68 Acres of Roof
9 detention basins
3 of which are recharge well basins
Roof water only
Land mitigation area = 625 acres
If recharge wells or bioretention not used
Recharge volume deficit of 83.3 acre-ft, 3.6 million cubic feet
12. Step 1 Use WINSLAMM to produce an inflow hydrograph file for each watershed tributary to a recharge basin with a minimum 60-minute time step
13. Step 2
14. Step 3 Lake Evaporation
Find mean monthly Class A pan evaporation data with at least 10 years of record
Data below is from ODNR for a station at Ohio State University
Convert to a constant flow rate
15. Step 4 Design water quality and peak flow rate control outlets assuming the following
Normal pool is at 12” above recharge well outlet
Normal pool is also equal to invert of water quality outlet
Do not assume any runoff volume losses due to the recharge well
16. Step 5
17. Basin Elevation vs. Time
18. Step 6
19. Step 7 Hire a Geotechnical Engineer !
Borings required with pumping tests to determine how many recharge wells are needed for each basin to meet the target recharge rate requirement
Number of recharge wells may vary considerably from site to site depending on subsurface geology
Consider a subsurface exploration or literature research to determine recharge well potential during due diligence process when in the Darby watershed
20. Special EPA Requirements Monitoring may be required
Recharge Volume
Quality
Roof water only unless pre-treated
Submerged outlet