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ASCE LowImpactDevelopmentforUrbanEcosystemandHabitatProtection 2008

$48.75

Low Impact Development for Urban Ecosystem and Habitat Protection

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
ASCE 2008 1143
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“Proceedings of the 2008 International Low Impact Development Conference, held in Seattle, Washington, November 16-19, 2008. Sponsored by the Low Impact Development Technical Committee of the Urban Water Resources Research Council of the Environmental and Water Resources Institute of ASCE. This collection contains 121 papers reporting on new and continuing research, developments, and community adoption of Low Impact Development (LID) throughout the United States and other parts of the world. These papers address a very broad range of topics that are relevant to sustainable approach to stormwater management using LID technology. Topics include: LID and sustainability; codes, regulations, constraints, guidelines; recent monitoring/performance findings; computational methods; advances in LID best-management practices design methods—lessons learned; site design considerations; LID incentives for new development; watershed retrofit with LID; education, training outreach; and long-term performance, maintenance. This proceedings is useful to student and academics involved in environmental engineering and low impact development, landscape architects, soil scientists, design professionals, and water program administrators.”

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
1 Cover
7 Table of Contents
17 Advances in LID BMP Design Methods
Bioretention Design and Consideration
An Approach to Analyze the Hydrologic Effects of Rain Gardens
26 An Investigation of Rain Garden Planting Mixture Performance and the Implication for Design
36 Cold Climate Issues for Bioretention: Assessing Impacts of Salt and Aggregate Application on Plant Health, Media Clogging, and Groundwater Quality
46 Design and Modeling of Bioretention for Hydromodification Control: An Assessment of Alternative Model Representations
56 Design of Integrated Bioretention-Infiltration Systems for Urban Retrofits
66 Lessons Learned from Monitoring of a Natural Drainage System in West Seattle’s High Point Neighborhood
75 Ecoroof / Greenroof Monitoring
A Laboratory Comparison of Green-Roof Runoff Water Quality
85 A Study of Green Roof Hydrologic Performance in the Cascadia Region
95 Early-Life Roof Runoff Quality: Green vs. Traditional Roofs
105 Flow Monitoring of Three Ecoroofs in Portland, Oregon
115 The Stormwater Control Potential of Green Roofs in Seattle
125 Green Infrastructure
LID As a Tool to Transform a DOT’s Design Manual and Method of Doing Business: The Anacostia Urban Design Standards and the Green Highway Movement
136 Green Roofs
Green Envelopes: Contribution of Green Roofs, Green Façades, and Green Streets to Reducing Stormwater Runoff, CO2 Emissions, and Energy Demand in Cities
144 A Deterministic Lumped Dynamic Green Roof Model
158 Quantifying Evapotranspiration Rates for New Zealand Green Roofs
171 Green Streets
Portland’s Green Streets: Lessons Learned Retrofitting our Urban Watersheds
187 Green Highways
Green Streets—An Opportunity to Transform Our Roads
197 Legacy LID: Stormwater Treatment in Unimproved Embankments along Highway Shoulders in Western Washington
207 Managing Street Runoff with Green Streets
217 Rain Gardens and Green Streets: The Future of Municipal Stormwater Management
229 Permeable Pavements
Low Impact Development and Permeable Interlocking Concrete Pavements: Working with Industry for Material Development and Training Offerings
238 Pervious Concrete Bicycle Lanes—Roadway Stormwater Mitigation within the Right-of-Way
245 Porous Concrete Sidewalks—How to Build Sidewalks, Not Stormwater Ponds
254 Pervious Pavement System Evaluation
263 Under-Pavement Infiltration Demonstration—Decatur Street Low Impact Development Roadway Project
271 Hydrologic and Water Quality Evaluation of Four Permeable Pavements in North Carolina, USA
281 Rainwater Harvesting
Integrating Rainwater Harvesting and Stormwater Management Infrastructure: Double Benefit-Single Cost
288 Matching Rainwater Harvesting Strategies with Ecological Flow Needs
298 Performance of Rainwater Harvesting Systems in the Southeastern United States
306 Study on the Economical Volume for Rainwater Harvesting
315 Water Reuse and Harvesting
Residential Manmade Lake System Design for Storm Water Treatment
323 Subsurface Wetland Systems for On-Site Wastewater Treatment and Reuse
332 Study on Application of Gravity-Flow Compound Ecological Filter Bed in the Purification of Urban River Water
342 Case Studies
LID—LEED—Smart Growth
A Case Study on the Use of LEED, LID, and BMPs in the Redevelopment of a Midwestern Urban Campus
352 Case Study: Low Impact Development Retrofit at Pillar Point Air Force Station
363 From the Mountains to the Coast—LID Case Studies from North Carolina
373 Implementation of Low Impact Development (LID) Practices in the District of Columbia: Lessons Learned
384 Integration of Water Resource Planning into Stormwater Design
391 Lincoln Center: Integrating Innovative Stormwater Management Technology into a Mixed Use Community
401 Low Impact Development Wal-Mart in North Carolina
408 Trade Winds Farm, Winchester, Connecticut—How to Create a LID Subdivision
417 Codes, Regulations, Constraints, Guidelines
Codes
Emerging State LID Regulatory Approaches and Compliance Tools for Local Governments
427 LID in Regulatory Water Pollution Control Programs: The District of Columbia Experience
433 Mimicking Predevelopment Hydrology Using LID: Time for a Reality Check?
438 Without a Standard, Low Impact Development Is Another Form of High Impact Development
447 Impediments to Using LID and Examples of Removing Those Barriers—From Public Acceptance to Regulatory Constraints
Ahead of the Curve—Tolland, Connecticut Adopts Low Impact Development Regulations
457 Seattle’s Policy and Pilots to Support Green Stormwater Infrastructure
461 Transforming Gray to Green in the Right-of-Way: Blurring the Lines…Softening the Edges
471 Understanding and Overcoming Legal and Administrative Barriers to LID: A Florida Case Study
481 Using Rainwater to Grow Livable Communities: A New Tool to Promote Multi- Benefit BMPs
491 Successful Collaborative Funding Approaches to LID
Organisational Change in Urban Stormwater Quality Management Programs
501 Using LID to Help Mitigate Impacts of Climate Change on Stormwater and Wastewater Systems
Sustaining Ecological Processes in High Density Urban Sprawl Areas in China
511 Computational Methods
Existing Computational Methods
Preparing a Pollution Loading Analysis for Land Development Projects
520 Continuous Simulation of Integrated Bioretention-Infiltration Systems for Urban Retrofits
530 Continuous Hydrology with Subbasin Specificity and LID: The Flow Duration Design Model
537 Determining Cost Effective Pollution Reduction BMP Scenarios for Low Impact Redevelopment and a Watershed Plan Using WinSLAMM
556 Development and Calibration of a High Resolution SWMM Model for Simulating the Effects of LID Retrofits on the Outflow Hydrograph of a Dense Urban Watershed
LID Analysis Considerations in Western Washington
565 Innovative Computation Tools
A Practical Methodology to Evaluate Hydromodification Performance of Conventional and Low Impact Stormwater Controls
574 A Simplified Approach for Sizing Green Stormwater Infrastructure in the City of Seattle
584 The Road to LID Plan Approval in Coastal North Carolina: Development of a Spreadsheet Modeling Tool for LID Based Design
594 Stochastic Analysis for the Effectiveness of BMP Implementation in a Watershed
604 Education, Training, Outreach
Commercial/Industrial/Incentives Programs
Stormwater BMP Maintenance and Certification Program in North Carolina, USA
610 LID Education, Training, Outreach with Single-Family Residents
LID Design for a Residential Lot in the Truckee River Watershed, CA
617 International Applications of LID
627 International Experiences with Low Impact Development (LID)
Design and Hydrologic Estimation Method of Multi-Purpose Rain Garden: Beijing Case Study
637 Growth of Low Impact Design in the Auckland Region (New Zealand) through an Innovative Grants Programme
649 The Auckland Sustainability Framework, Urbanisation, and Low Impact Design in the Auckland Region (New Zealand)
661 Innovative Stormwater Management in Canada
671 Sustainable Stormwater Management: Implementation of Pilot Low Impact Development Stormwater Controls at US Department of Defense Installations in Europe
680 LID and Sustainability
Green Infrastructure
Assessing Sustainability for Urban Regeneration in a River Corridor—Accounting for Climate Change
690 Building the Marketplace for LID: A New Habitat-Based Approach
698 Green Infrastructure for Urban Stormwater Management
705 Low Impact Development in Utah: Progress, Constraints, and Future Outlook
715 Seattle Public Utilities’ Natural Drainage System Operation and Maintenance
721 Stormwater Concepts—No Adverse Impact
726 The Low Impact Design Charrette: Engaging the Public and Expanding Green Stormwater Management in San Francisco
735 LID and Stream Restoration
A Watershed-Based Approach to Low Impact Development
745 Effect of Bioretention on Runoff Temperature in Trout Sensitive Regions
752 Inventory and Prioritization of LID Projects at a Sub-Watershed Scale
763 Stream Restoration through Stormwater Runoff Management and Retrofit: New Objectives, New Approaches
773 Soils and Vegetation
Ecological Functions Evaluation Study of Urban Landscape Construction Based on LID
785 Improvements in Infiltration Rates of Compacted Soil with Tillage and Compost
792 Pollutant Transport within the Vadose Zone of Natural Soils: With Focus on the Interactions of Individual Soil Horizons
801 Start with the Soil: Changing Construction Site Soil and Vegetation Management in Washington
805 LID Incentives for New Construction
Cost Comparison—Traditional vs. LID
Cost-Benefit Evaluation of Ecoroofs
815 Incentives for Incorporating LID
An Approach to Mainstreaming Low Impact Development (LID) Technology in Municipal Engineering Practices
825 Integrated Water Management Demonstration Project for Low Impact Development Urban Retrofit and Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Systems in the Upper Patuxent River Watershed, Prince George’s County, Maryland
835 Reducing Stormwater Costs through LID Strategies and Practices
845 Seattle’s Stormwater Facility Credit Program: Incentivizing Onsite Stormwater Management
854 Recent Monitoring/Performance Findings
Bioretention Monitoring
An Evaluation of Planting Soil Mixtures on Bioretention Cell Performance
864 Bacterra by Filterra Advanced Bioretention System: Discussion of the Benefits, Mechanisms, and Efficiencies for Bacteria Removal
877 Enhancing Rain Garden Design to Promote Nitrate Removal via Denitrification
887 Bioretention Performance in the Upper Coastal Plain of North Carolina
897 Estimation of Evapotranspiration and Groundwater Recharge from Bioretention Areas Using Weighing Lysimeters
904 Four Levels of Assessment for LID Practices
913 Integrated Practice Monitoring
A Comparison of Conventional and Low Impact Development Stormwater Best Management Practices
923 Field Evaluation of Hydrologic and Water Quality Benefits of Grass Swales with Check Dams for Managing Highway Runoff
931 Field Evaluation of Level Spreaders for Runoff Reduction and Water Quality Impacts
941 LID Performance Monitoring Challenges and Results for Infiltrating BMPs: Bioretention Cells, Raingardens, and Porous Pavements
953 Site Design Considerations
LID Applications
Design, Engineering, Installation, and O&M Considerations for Incorporating Stormwater Low Impact Development (LID) Practices in Urban, Suburban, Rural, and Brownfield Sites
963 Kitsap SEED—Marrying the Ultra-Modern with Zero-Discharge Requirements
971 Lessons Learned: The North Carolina Backyard Rain Garden Program
980 LID Feasibility, Design, and Implementation at Cape Lookout National Seashore
984 Low-Impact Development and Coastal Waters: Can Public Health Standards Be Protected?
993 Monitoring-Based Annual Water Balances as Targets for Minimal Impact Development
1003 Stormwater Management Conceived as Amenity: The Application of Artful Rainwater Design
1014 Watershed Retrofit with LID
CSO Control and LID
Advanced Drainage Concepts Using Green Solutions for CSO Control—The KC Approach
1025 Enhancement of the Green Build-Out Model to Quantify Stormwater Reduction Benefits in Washington, DC
1035 Green Infrastructure Approaches to Control of Combined Sewer Overflows
1046 Risk Analysis Application for Assessing the Cost-Effectiveness of Low Impact Development for CSO Control Using LIDRA
1056 Exemplary Case Studies
Creating a LID Environment in an Ultra Urban Setting
1065 Greening Stormwater Infrastructure: Integrating Low-Impact Development with Traditional Methods in Washington State
1075 Implementation of Low Impact Development Retrofits in a Low Income Neighborhood in Wilmington, NC
1085 Low Impact Development in San Diego—Demonstration Projects and Proposed Urban Retrofits
1095 Mt. Airy Rain Catchers—Rain Barrels and Gardens in a Suburban Watershed
1105 OHSU Stormwater Management Plan: A Unique Approach to Stormwater Management for Campus Facilities Using Low Impact Development
1115 Painting It Green—Replacing an All-Pipe Solution with an Integrated Solution Emphasizing Low Impact Development
1125 Retrofitting an Urban Watershed—Incentivizing and Incorporating LIDs One Parcel at a Time
1134 Stormwater Retrofit at Mt. Tabor Middle School: Lessons Learned about Designing Landscape Systems at Schools
ASCE LowImpactDevelopmentforUrbanEcosystemandHabitatProtection 2008
$48.75