Stormwater control measure (SCM) design standards to limit stream erosion for Piedmont North Carolina

2011 ◽  
Vol 411 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 185-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.D. Tillinghast ◽  
W.F. Hunt ◽  
G.D. Jennings
2015 ◽  
Vol 141 (1) ◽  
pp. 04014045 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan J. Winston ◽  
Matthew S. Lauffer ◽  
Karthik Narayanaswamy ◽  
Andrew H. McDaniel ◽  
Brian S. Lipscomb ◽  
...  

Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca A. Purvis ◽  
Ryan J. Winston ◽  
William F. Hunt ◽  
Brian Lipscomb ◽  
Karthik Narayanaswamy ◽  
...  

Bioswales are a promising stormwater control measure (SCM) for roadway runoff management, but few studies have assessed performance on a field scale. A bioswale is a vegetated channel with underlying engineered media and a perforated underdrain to promote improved hydrologic and water quality treatment. A bioswale with a rip-rap lined forebay was constructed along state highway NC 211 in Bolivia, North Carolina, USA, and monitored for 12 months. Thirty-seven of the 39 monitored rain events exfiltrated into underlying soils, resulting in no appreciable overflow or underdrain volume. The bioswale completely exfiltrated a storm event of 86.1 mm. The one event to have underdrain-only flow was 4.8 mm. The largest and third-largest rainfall depth events (82.6 and 146 mm, respectively) had a large percentage (85%) of volume exfiltrated, but also had appreciable overflow and underdrain volumes exiting the bioswale, resulting in no peak flow mitigation. Overall, this bioswale design was able to capture and manage storms larger than the design storm (38 mm), showing the positive hydrologic performance that can be achieved by this bioswale. The high treatment capabilities were likely due to the high infiltration rate of the media and the underlying soil, longer forebay underlain with media, gravel detention layer with an underdrain, and shallow slope.


2019 ◽  
Vol 661 ◽  
pp. 386-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Liang ◽  
Lora A. Harris ◽  
Jeremy M. Testa ◽  
Vyacheslav Lyubchich ◽  
Solange Filoso

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher John Walsh ◽  
Sam Imberger ◽  
Matthew J Burns ◽  
Darren G Bos ◽  
Tim D Fletcher

Traditional approaches to urban drainage degrade receiving waters. Alternative approaches have potential to protect downstream waters and provide other benefits to cities, including greater water security. Their widespread adoption requires robust demonstration of their feasibility and effectiveness. We conducted a catchment-scale, before-after-control-reference-impact experiment to assess the effect of dispersed stormwater control on stream ecosystems. We used a variant of effective imperviousness (EI), integrating catchment-scale stormwater runoff impact and stormwater-control-measure (SCM) performance, as the measure of experimental effect. We assessed the response of water quality variables in 6 sites on 2 streams, following SCM implementation in their catchments. We compared changes in those streams over 7 years, as SCM implementation increased, to the 12 preceding years, and over the 19 years in 3 reference and 2 control streams. SCMs reduced phosphorus and nitrogen concentrations and temperature, and increased electrical conductivity; with effect size negatively correlated with antecedent rain. SCM-induced reductions in phosphorus and temperature were of a similar magnitude to increases from urban development, when assessed as a function of change in EI. Nitrogen reductions were observed, even though concentrations among sites were not correlated with EI, being more influenced by septic tank seepage. SCMs had no effect on suspended solids concentrations, which were lower in urban streams than in reference streams. This experiment strengthens the inference that urban stormwater drainage increases contaminant concentrations in urban streams, and demonstrates that such impacts are reversible and likely preventable. SCMs reduce contaminant concentrations by reducing the frequency and magnitude of uncontrolled drainage flows and augmenting reduced baseflows. Increased EC and reduced temperature are likely a result of increased contribution of groundwater to baseflows. The stormwater control achieved by the experiment did not fully return phosphorus or nitrogen concentrations to reference levels, but their responses indicate such an outcome is possible in dominant conditions (up to ~20 mm of 24-h antecedent rain). This would require nearly all impervious surfaces draining to SCMs with large retention capacity, thus requiring more downslope space and water demand. EI predicts stream water quality responses to SCMs, allowing better catchment prioritization and SCM design standards for stream protection.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 1644
Author(s):  
Tyler Dell ◽  
Mostafa Razzaghmanesh ◽  
Sybil Sharvelle ◽  
Mazdak Arabi

There is growing interest for the installation of green stormwater infrastructure (GSI) to improve stormwater control, increase infiltration of stormwater, and improve receiving water body quality. Planning level tools are needed to inform municipal scale decisions on the type and extent of GSI to apply. Here, a modified methodology is developed for the EPA Storm Water Management Model (SWMM) to create SWMM for Low Impact Technology Evaluation (SWWM-LITE) that enables municipal scale assessment of stormwater control measure (SCM) performance with minimal input data requirements and low processing time. Hydrologic outputs of SWMM-LITE are compared to those for SWMM and the National Stormwater Calculator (SWC) to assess the performance of SWMM-LITE. Three scenarios including the baseline without SCMs and the installation of varying SCMs were investigated. Across the three scenarios, SWMM-LITE estimates of annual average hydrologic performance (runoff, infiltration, and evaporation) were within +/−0.1% of estimates from a rigorously developed SWMM model in the City of Fort Collins, CO, for an evaluation of 30 years of continuous simulation. Analysis conducted for 2 year (y), 10 y, and 100 y storm events showed less than +/−2.5% difference between SWMM and SWMM-LITE hydrologic outputs. SWC provided reasonable estimates of hydrologic parameters for the case study area, but was designed for site level analyses of performance of SCMs rather than on the municipal scale. A sensitivity analysis revealed that the most sensitive parameters were primarily consistent for the SWMM-LITE and the complete SWMM. SWMM-LITE has low input data requirements and processing time and can be applied for assessing the hydrologic performance of SCMs to inform planning level decisions.


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