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Promoting Low Impact Development in Pima County Through Site Planning and Watershed Management Evan Canfield 01-08-20

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Page 1: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Promoting Low Impact Development in Pima County Through Site Planning and Watershed Management

Evan Canfield

01-08-20

Page 2: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 3: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Pima County LID Policies

Pima County LID Guidance

Page 4: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

4

Table 1 – Best Use of Rainwater and Stormwater Described in this Paper

Built Environment Future

Development Regional Watercourses Recharge X X Capture X X Tributary Watercourses Recharge X X Capture X X Neighborhood Drainage Capture X X Lot Scale Capture X X

Regional Watercourses: Santa Cruz River, Rillito Creek, Pantano Wash, Tanque Verde Creek, Canada Del Oro Wash, Brawley Wash, Black Wash Tributary Watercourse is a tributary to a Regional Watercourse

Page 5: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Recharge vs CaptureRecharge - Infiltrate to

the regional aquifer for future use.

Capture – store for use in the near term.

Page 6: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

6

Measure all the Rain falling on a watershed over years

Depth x Area = Volume‘Harvestable’ =

Measure all the Runoff out on a watershed over years

Volume

Volume Runoff------------------Volume Rain

Santa Rita 128 years (4.88 acres)

16.5 inchs---------------- = 4.3%387 inches

Page 7: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

7Graph updated from City/County Water Study Stormwater as a Supplemental Water Source, May 2009

Page 8: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 9: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Notes: Area = 230 sq Miles, Potable Water Sales from 2014, 27% Outside Water UseRainfall =11.3 inch/yr, Harvestable Stormwater assumes 30% Impervious at 83% Harvestable

0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

120,000

140,000

160,000

CAP Potable Sales Outside WaterUse

Avg AnnualRainwater

HarvestableStormwater

Tucson Water Service AreaWater in Acre-Ft

Page 10: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

10

Value Unit Source

Tucson Area 236square miles

Stormwater Harvesting and Management as a Supplemental Resource (2009)

151,040AcresRainfall 11.3inches

0.94FeetTotal Rainfall Volume 142,229Acre-Ft of Rainfall

Impervious Area 30%Impervious Common in TSMS HEC-1 Files45,312Acres

Harvestable 83%Harvestable off Impervious Surface

Stormwater Harvesting and Management as a Supplemental Resource (2009)

35,415Acre-Ft of Harvestable Water

Page 11: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 12: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Low Impact Development andGreen Infrastructure

Low Impact Development (LID)

‘A comprehensive stormwater management and site-design technique. . . the goal of any

construction project is to design a hydrologicallyfunctional site that mimics predevelopment

conditions…’

Green Infrastructure -

‘As a general principal, Green Infrastructure techniques use soils and vegetation to infiltrate,

evapotranspirate, and/or recycle stormwaterrunoff…’

EPA Green Infrastructure Homepage - Glossary

Page 13: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 14: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 15: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

• Used variables from Jeff Kennedy’s KINEROS model to create a SWMM model.

• Uses Green Ampt infiltration based on Jeff Kennedy’s tensiometermeasured infiltration data and parameters calibrated to runoff data at La Terraza.

• Urban soils at La Terraza – optimal Ksat = 2.5 mm/hr (0.10 in/hr)

Page 16: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45Observed Qp (cfs)

Pred

icte

d Q

p (c

fs)

R2 = 0.79

RMSE = 4.6 cfs

n = 59

Modeling the urban runoff from rainfall data and using grassland runoff data as upstream inflow:

Page 17: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

100% distributed 50% distributed 0% distributed

Page 18: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

LID and Stormwater Harvesting are particularly effective for small events. However, what are the impacts on the 100-yr event?

1-hr, 100-yr Storm applied to 12 cases Varied catchment scale (2%, 5%, 10%, 16%) Area of stormwater harvesting (SWH) relative to developed

area diverted to SWH basin Varied distribution in urban watershed 100% distribution (each lot has SWH basin) 50% distribution (1/2 at lot, ½ at outlet) 0% distribution (all SWH at outlet)

Page 19: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

0

50

100

150

200

250

0:00 0:15 0:30 0:45 1:00 1:15 1:30 1:45

Out

flow

(cfs

)

Time (hours)

No Stormwater Harvesting

10.3% Volume Retained

25.7% Volume Retained

51.4% Volume Retained

85.7% Volume Retained

Modeled 100-yr Outflow Hydrographs

Page 20: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Distribution of SWH basins has a large effect on runoff volume and peak discharge.

0

50

100

150

200

250

0:00:00 0:28:48 0:57:36 1:26:24 1:55:12 2:24:00 2:52:48

Time

J20

(cfs

)

100% dist50% dist0% dist100-yr Base model at J20

Page 21: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

0.0%

5.0%

10.0%

15.0%

20.0%

25.0%

30.0%

35.0%

40.0%

0.0% 2.0% 4.0% 6.0% 8.0% 10.0% 12.0% 14.0% 16.0% 18.0%

Stormwater Harvesting Catchment Scale

100-

yr V

olum

e R

educ

tion

0% Distributed50% Distributed100% DistributedAverage Value

Page 22: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

𝑄𝑄𝑄𝑄𝐺𝐺𝐺𝐺 = 𝑄𝑄𝑄𝑄𝑉𝑉𝐺𝐺𝐺𝐺𝑉𝑉

Equation 4-9

y = -0.38x2 + 1.47x - 0.133R² = 0.95

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

Mod

eled

Red

uctio

n in

Pea

k D

isch

arge

Modeled Stormwater Harvesting Basin Volume relative to Runoff Volume

La Terraza SWMMResults

Commercial SiteSWMM Results

RMSE = 6.9%

Page 23: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Pima County:Detention-Retention Manual

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

4.0

4.5

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

Dai

ly P

reci

pita

tion

(inch

)

Percent

85th Percentile Rainfall 0.48 inch

Replace Retention Requirement with a‘First Flush’ Retention Requirement

(data U of A Daily rainfall 1895-2000)

Page 24: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Classification of Watershed vs Proposed Use

Riparian/High Permeability, Proposed Impervious Area 1815 0Nonriparian/lLow Permeability, Proposed Impervious Area 1440 2.100 3024Riparian/High Permeability, Proposed Disturbed Area 245 0.300 74NonRiparian/Low )Permeability, Proposed Disturbed Area 140 0Remaining Undisturbed Area, Pre-Developed Watershed (Info Only) 0.000Total Required First Flush Volume 3098

Volume ft3/ac

Table 2.1

Area of Proposed Use (ac)

First Flush Required

Volume (ft3)

Page 25: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Pima County LID Policies

Page 26: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Low Impact Development Benefits

Site Planning(Avoidance and Prevention)

Green Infrastructure(Structural)

• Flood Control• Stormwater Management•Pollution Prevention•Energy Efficiency• Supports Landscape Amenities

•Preserve Natural Flow Paths•Minimize Impervious area•Reduce Disturbance

•Rainwater and Stormwater Harvesting Features

•Naturalized Conveyance Features

LID TechniquesBeneficial Alternatives to Traditional Practices

Page 27: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 28: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Example Commercial Site

39 cfs

12 cfs

20 cfs71 cfs

Existing Adjacent Commercial

Redundant Entrance

Page 29: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

SITE PLAN SUBMITTAL

Offsite and Roof Flows to Storm Drain

Detention in Underground

Chambers

Minimum Volume in Distributed

Basins

Number of Parking Spaces Exceeds Required Number

Driveway Spacing Exceeds Minimum

Page 30: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Low Impact Development Benefits

Site Planning(Avoidance and Prevention)

Green Infrastructure(Structural)

• Flood Control• Stormwater Management•Pollution Prevention•Energy Efficiency• Supports Landscape Amenities

•Preserve Natural Flow Paths•Minimize Impervious area•Reduce Disturbance

•Rainwater and Stormwater Harvesting Features

•Naturalized Conveyance Features

LID TechniquesBeneficial Alternatives to Traditional Practices

Page 31: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Offsite Flows to Vegetated Swale with

Check Dams

• Saves $ on Storm Drain• Landscape Buffer for

Residences to East• Supplements Irrigation

Pavement and Roof Flows to Distributed

BasinsReduced Parking = Basin Area

Driveway Spacing Reduced by 20 feet =

Area on East for Swale

• Saves $ on Underground Chambers

• Provides Shade for Parking• Supplements Irrigation

Making this Project More LID-Friendly

Page 32: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

32

Applying these planning principles to larger-scale residential projects results in preservation of flow corridors and riparian

habitat, both associated with reduced flood risk

Parcel Existing Conditions Traditional Maximized Grading Concept

Page 33: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Lot Yield Comparison When Flow Corridors are Preserved

Loss of 169 Lots??????

Page 34: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

$$$ $2,675 x 559 Lots = $1.5 Million$$$ Reduced Grading Costs$$$ Reduced Cost of Constructing Drainage Channels$$$ Reduced Cost of Landscape Installation$$$ Reduced Cost of Detention and Other Flood Works$$$ Reduced Cost of Riparian Habitat Mitigation$$$ Reduced Cost of Salvaging and Relocating

Protected Species such as Saguaros

Take a Look at Cost Offsets

Page 35: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Final Construction Merged Lot-Yieldand Open Space Drivers

Plat Boundary Expanded

Modified Lot Sizes

Not All Flow Corridors Preserved

Lot Yield = 953 Lots = + 225 Lots

Page 36: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and
Page 37: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

1. Residential Parcels: ~1/3 of available landscape for selected parcels delineated as rain gardens. Included streetside basins if appropriate for the space.

Model representation On-the-ground potential practice

10% & 25% Scenario: Green Stormwater Infrastructure Retrofits

Page 38: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Valencia Residential

Drainage Area:7 Acres

Page 39: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Evaluation of Flood Reduction in RuthrauffBasin from Installation of GI/LID Only in Right of Way

Page 40: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Impact of GI/LID on Flood Peak Reduction in Ruthrauff Basin

-16%

-14%

-12%

-10%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%10-yr 25-yr 100-yr

Perc

ent R

educ

tion

in F

lood

Pea

k 10% of Parcels

25% of Parcels

10% of Parcels10-yr 25-yr 100-yr

Mean -4.0% -3.4% -2.0%Min -15.5% -11.4% -11.1%Max 17.6% 20.3% 25.7%Outflow Volume Reduction 2.5% 1.9% 1.3%

25% of Parcels10-yr 25-yr 100-yr

Mean -14.3% -10.4% -6.9%Min -33.3% -28.9% -22.3%Max 0.0% 1.4% 7.1%Outflow Volume Reduction 6.1% 4.7% 3.3%

Page 41: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Evaluating a Silverbell Road Green Infrastructure Retrofit

Analysis: • Evaluate Green vs Gray

Drainage

• Evaluate Multiple Benefits

Tool: AutoCASE®

(Envision ® Rating)

GI Feature Added: BioretentionWater Harvesting basinsTreesTraffic Calming

Page 42: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

The Triple Bottom Line Framework (e.g. for a road project)

Project CashImpacts

Revenue;Operational

Savings

Capital Costs; O&M

Costs

Water Quality

Green House Gases

Flood Risk Reduction

Water Quantity

Property Value Uplift

Shadow Wage

Benefit

Non-Cash Impacts

Heat Island

Mitigation

Value of Time

Criteria Air Contaminants

Health & Safety OtherRecreation

Value

Financial Return

Sustainable Return on Investment

Page 43: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Probabilistic Assessment produces more resilient projects

F = f (A, B, C, D, ..)

Reduced Energy Demand(kwh/yr)

Runoff Flooding (# Events/yr)

Energy Savings($/kwh)

Property Value ($/Flood Event)

Value of Investment

($/yr)

Jointly Determined Probabilities

• Risk analysis is the systematic use of available data to determine how often specific events may occur and what the magnitude of their consequences is.

• Probability distributions account for uncertainty in key drivers

• Monte Carlo simulation integrates uncertainties to reveal comprehensive perspective

Page 44: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Risk-adjusted outcomes

Sustainable NPV -incorporates all costs and benefits in the model, including impacts on the local economy, society,and the environment.

Direct Financial NPV -direct costs and benefits such as capital expenditures, revenues, etc.

The difference between the curves is the (net) non-market or societal benefits (externalities) such as lower carbon emissions, less urban heat island effect and other impacts.

Page 45: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Sustainable Net Present Value Benefits

45

Reduced Electricity

Costs

Reduced Flood RiskReduced Heat Stress

Mortality

Reduced CO2 Emissions

Reduced Air PollutionDirect

Costs of Water

Social Costs of Water Use

Traffic Calming -Roundabouts

and Curb Extension

Other Benefits

1. Improved Safety through Traffic Calming (36%)

2. Financial and social benefits of reduced water use (25%)

3. Improved air quality (20%)

4. Energy Savings (10%)

5. Reduced Flood Risk (6%)

Page 46: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Conclusions• Pima County, Pima County Regional Flood Control District, City

of Tucson and Stakeholders have been evaluating Green Infrastructure (GI) and Low Impact Development (LID) to determine it’s value in:•Flood reduction•Reduction of potable water use•Value of co-benefits

• LID/GI is integrated into new drainage development standards• Pima County, Pima County Regional Flood Control District, City

of Tucson and Stakeholders have supported regulatory standards with Guidance•Green Infrastructure Manual•Case Studies

Page 47: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Acknowledgements

Tamara MittmanJame Piziali

Martina FreyJason Wright

Lynn OrchardSandy BolducAnn MoynihanMarie LightJennifer Becker

Irene OgataGary Wittwer

Mead Mier

Akitsu Kimoto

Ian Sharp John WilliamsJohn ParkerRyan Myers

Page 48: Promoting Low Impact Development 01-08-20 in Pima County · Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure Low Impact Development (LID) ‘ A comprehensive stormwatermanagement and

Thank you!

Questions?

Evan [email protected]