How We Can Better Plan Our Cities to Utilize Stormwater

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How We Can Better Plan Our Cities to Utilize Stormwater

We are finally learning that stormwater can be an asset to communities but now we need to make some urban planning and engineering changes to take advantage of it, writes architect Rinaldo Veseliza.

Our urban areas have lost their ability to naturally recycle stormwater due to the impervious nature of infrastructure engineering over the past 100 years.

We have been building roadways and streets to capture the runoff and send it somewhere else, usually to the river or ocean. For decades in California, controlling stormwater was the main goal but today, with more water scarcity, we are beginning to see this same water more as an asset and less as a liability.

California drought conservation

Pedestrians carry umbrellas as they cross Powell Street and cable car tracks in San Francisco in Oct. 2016. There are many urban planning decisions that cities can implement to make better use of stormwater and decrease water pollution.Paul Chinn /San Francisco Chronicle via AP

One way of better using stormwater is by refilling underground aquifers that have been depleted by overpumping. Recycling of all captured waters would then reduce pollution of our creeks, rivers, bays and oceans. Therefore we need to revisit current policies and practices and change the popular mindset to manage water effectively and redirect water into the proper channels, starting with a simple solution to retrofit our streets with permeable surfaces to change the dynamics of water management.

Our cities and counties need to reengineer our water collection systems to release as much water as possible into the ground locally before it gets into the storm drains so the earth beneath us can recycle most of the water, reducing the amount of mercury and PCBs released into waterways. The remaining water should be captured and processed in the way sewage is, before reuse or release into the environment. Both simple and complex solutions are available and several have been incorporated in new projects.

The 18–24in (45–61cm) strip at the curb could be replaced with pavers or pervious concrete that could significantly reduce stormwater drainage problems by allowing polluted water to be filtered by natural soils and help refill the underground aquifers. (Rinadlo Veseliza)

The 18–24in (45–61cm) strip at the curb could be replaced with pavers or pervious concrete that could significantly reduce stormwater drainage problems by allowing polluted water to be filtered by natural soils and help refill the underground aquifers. ( Rinadlo  Veseliza)

Many large coastal cities have serious pollution problems after each rainfall, where stormwater carries more dangerous pollutants than raw sewage due to the presence of oils, trash, feces and chemicals on streets and sidewalks. The pollution is washed directly into the bay and ocean without any filtration. To make matters worse, broken sewers and faulty septic systems can add significant numbers of pollutants, resulting in added stress on our rivers and waterways.

If we could reengineer our streets to absorb the stormwater locally so it could percolate and purify locally, we would reduce the amount of water polluting our waterways, beaches, lakes and streams. Removing impervious surfaces and replacing with pervious surfaces would be ideal but is costly and disruptive to urban life and traffic. Removing some portions of roadway would be less expensive and can be better managed.

More specific solutions include:

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3 Comments

  1. I like the theme-but, do not forget that when I was just a new hydrogeologist in the 1980's we were infiltrating stormwater into the aquifer in the Santa Ana River watershed.