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Evaluation of Private Property I/I Sources for Sanitary Sewer Evaluation Study. City of Grand Rapids – E. Leonard Heights Area Presenter: Jay Zawacki, CDM Michigan Inc. MI AWWA / MWEA Annual Conference August 13, 2010. Overview. Project Background SSES Objectives
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Evaluation of Private Property I/I Sources for Sanitary Sewer Evaluation Study City of Grand Rapids – E. Leonard Heights Area Presenter: Jay Zawacki, CDM Michigan Inc. MI AWWA / MWEA Annual Conference August 13, 2010
Overview • Project Background • SSES Objectives • Private Property Evaluation Strategies • Private Property I/I Findings • SSES Alternatives Considered and Selected
E. Leonard Heights Study Area Sweet St. Ball Ave. Spencer St. E. Leonard St. Mayfield Ave. Lewison Ave. Carlton Ave.
Project Background • History of chronic basement backups in the study area • Grand Rapids recognized and began program to address these issues: • Inspections of homes • Voluntary installation of check valves and sump pumps • Comprehensive “system-wide” evaluation being performed
Project Objectives • Engage the public • Public meetings • Citizen committee • Quantify the sources of Inflow/Infiltration (I/I) • Homeowner survey and inspections • Sewer flow and sump pump monitoring • Inspect the sewers and manholes • Analyze the problem and develop alternatives • Select the best solution
Surface Runoff into storm drains and streams 70% 30% Soaks Into Soil Other Sources 5% wastewater 95% stormwater I/I Stream baseflows, grass & trees Footing Drains Where Does the Rain Go? Storm Drain Sanitary Sewer
Private Property Survey and Inspection • Exterior Survey: • Evaluated site drainage • Identified downspout discharge locations • Determined basement type/depth • Interior Survey: • Backup history • Presence of footing drains & sump pump
Private Property Survey Findings • Footing Drains: • 516 properties have connected FDs • 66properties not connected (sump pumps) • Apartments = 21 equivalent FDs • Drainage: • Gutters and downspouts = 80% • Surface drainage = Mostly to street
Sewer and Manhole Survey • Evaluated I/I conditions at each sewer manhole • Reviewed I/I conditions of sewer pipes using video inspection and PACP coding • Determined material and condition of selected house lateral connections
Sewer and Manhole Survey Findings • Sewers in good shape • Some structural and maintenance issues found, provided to city for correction • Some evidence of limited infiltration at pipe joints • House lead inspections identified no substantial I/I sources • Street flooding can cause significant flow into manhole covers
Flow, Rain and Sump Monitoring • Monitor sewer flows (4-months) • Wastewater levels and flows during storms • Establish sewer capacity • Measure rainfall in area • Monitor sump pump flows • 15 homes monitored • Understand local peak flows
Monitoring Findings • Sanitary sewer system capacity not sufficient for flows generated during large storms • Footing drain connections on private property are major source of I/I (flow into sewer during rain storms)
Alternative Solutions • Solution 1 – Relief Sewers • Internal relief sewer to west of Spencer Street • Downstream relief (if needed) to Plainfield Avenue • Solution 2 – Local Relief and Storage • Internal relief to underground storage facility • Storage located west of Spencer Street • Solution 3 – Footing Drain Disconnection (FDD) • Sufficient FDD to eliminate surcharging
Solution 1 – Sewer Upsizing (Relief) • Relief provided to eliminate surcharging • Relief requirements: • ELH area: 10 relief sewer segments • Downstream: 31 relief sewer segments • WWTP storage
Solution 2 – Sewer Upsizing and Local Storage • Relief sanitary sewers provided to eliminate surcharging • Local storage provided west of Spencer Street • System requirements: • Build 10 relief sewer segments in ELH • Store 500,000gallons at the school
Solution 3 – Footing Drain Disconnection • Remove footing drain flows from homes to eliminate surcharging • Sump pumps used to route footing drain flowto the storm drains • Surcharging eliminatedby disconnecting at least 60% of the connected homes
Selection Matrix used to Quantify Preferences of Citizens and City Staff • Quality of Life • Level of protection for private property • Reliability under large storms • Sustainability of solution • Costs (Construction, O&M, homeowner costs) • Construction • Time until solution is effective • Impacts on streets and public areas • Need to work on private property
Recommended Solution – FDD • Perform minimum of 310 FDDs in E. Leonard Heights neighborhood • Consider backup sump pump in each home • Include backup check valve for homes previously flooded or at risk for flooding • Provide manhole liners for street flooding areas • All sump pumps will discharge to storm system to eliminate freezing problems in winter • Program is mandatory
Benefits – FDD • Addresses root cause of excessive I/I (Green solution) • Can be implemented more quickly than other options • Lower costs for treatment and no additional storage required at WWTP • Least impact on rate payers • Brings older homes into compliance with existing plumbing codes
Concerns – FDD • Water in basement during power outage: • Evaluating legal implications of providing backup sump pumps for all FDD homes • Sump pump replacement cost: • Pumps typically last 5-10 years before replacement needed • Increased street flooding: • Flows from sump pumps could increase street flooding levels by an average of 1/8” • Could upgrade upstream stormwater storage to address additional sump pump flow
Questions? Jay Zawacki – CDM Michigan Inc. zawackijr@cdm.com (734) 205-2701