Transcript Slide 1

Green Roofs and Green
Infrastructure
High-Performance Building Week
June 16, 2010
Environmental Benefits of Green
Roofs, Green Infrastructure, and
Low-Impact Development:
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Control stormwater runoff
Improve water quality
Conserve water
Reduce urban heat island effect
Store carbon
Improve air quality
Reduce building energy use
Create biohabitat
Impervious Surface and Water Quality
• Natural landscapes clean and filter
water, slow and reduce runoff
• Traditional development increases
impervious surfaces
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In the U.S., impervious surfaces
are increasing 3% annually
• Result: Urban and suburban
stormwater runoff is the #1
cause of pollution in urban
watersheds
Sources: Urban Green Space: Effects on Water and Climate, Regina
E. Bonsignore, University of Minnesota, 2003; Stream Corridor
Restoration: Principles, Processes, and Practices, Federal
Interagency Stream Restoration Working Group, 1998.
Impervious Surface and Water Quality
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Water quality begins to
degrade when impervious
cover exceeds 10%
Water quality becomes
“poor” when impervious
cover exceeds 25%
D.C. – 46 % impervious
NYC – over 90% impervious
Stormwater concerns:
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Pollutant load
Water temperature
Speed and quantity causes
erosion and streambed
scouring
Sources: Urban Green Space: Effects on Water and Climate, Regina
E. Bonsignore, University of Minnesota, 2003; Stream Corridor
Restoration: Principles, Processes, and Practices, Federal
Interagency Stream Restoration Working Group, 1998.
Water Quality: Combined Sewer
Outflows
• Heavy storms = release of
untreated sewage and runoff into
watersheds.
• Nationwide, CSOs affect
772 cities, 40 million people
• Scope of problem in D.C. — 2.5
billion gallons of untreated
wastewater and precipitation
released annually
• In some parts of D.C., one-tenth
inch of rain triggers CSOs
• Cost of fixing problem in D.C. -$2.6 billion
Sources: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; D.C. Water and
Sewer Authority
Water Quality: Combined Sewer
Outflows
• CSOs are #1
cause of
beach
closures
around
urban areas
Impervious Surface and Flooding
• As development
increases, so does the
amount and speed of
stream flow
• As stream flow speeds
increase, so does
flooding
Source: U.S. Geological Survey
Houston 2001: Tropical Storm Allison
• $6.5 billion (‘08 USD) in damages
• 41 deaths
• 70,000 homes flooded
Traditional Development = Urban
Heat Island
• = Increased air
pollution and
related health
problems
• = Increased carbon
footprint -- higher
temperatures
require more
energy for cooling
Test
Sources: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; Paul R. Baumann,
Department of Geography, SUNY Oneonta
April 15, 2004
Roofs are 15-25% of surface
area in cities
ASLA: Pre-Green Roof
Image Courtesy of Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, Inc. & ASLA
ASLA Green Roof
ASLA Green Roof Results
• Retains 100 % of a oneinch rainfall and over 77
% of total annual rainfall
• Reduces the amount of
nitrogen entering the
watershed
• Building energy use
reduced by 10 % in
winter months
• Temperature as much as
43.5 cooler in the
summer
•25% reduction in
stormwater leaving site
•Bioretention planters
filter and clean water
• LEED platinum
• Integrated stormwater and
wastewater system
Sidwell Friends School, D.C.
Image courtesy of Andropogon
• Biofilters treat building
wastewater for reuse
• Uses constructed wetlands,
rain gardens, bioswales,
biofiltration and habitat
pools
• 120 acre residential
redevelopment
• Returns clean water to an urban
salmon-bearing stream
Sustainable Housing Community: High Point
Seattle, Washington
Photo courtesy of Mithun
• Rain gardens, pervious
pavements, 22,000 linear feet
of bioswales
• Native plants and rich
vegetation
• Controls water flow for 100-year
storm events
Photo courtesy of Mithun
• Incorporates “Complete
Streets”
• Handles 100-year storm
rainfalls
Photo courtesy of Mithun
• Retail district “green street”
• Retains 100% of rainfall from
a 100-year storm
• Channels water from street
into stormwater planters
SW 12th Avenue, Portland, OR
Photo courtesy of Kevin Robert Perry, ASLA
•Residential “green street”
NE Siskiyou, Portland, OR
Photo courtesy of Kevin Robert Perry, ASLA
Photo courtesy of Kevin Robert Perry, ASLA
Photo courtesy of Kevin Robert Perry, ASLA
•Turned derelict riverfront into
23 acres of park land
•Mitigated erosion
•Enhanced flood control
Buffalo Bayou Promenade, Houston, TX
Photo courtesy SWA Group
• Reduces air temperature
• Provides recreation
opportunities
• Creates biohabitat
Buffalo Bayou Promenade, Houston, TX
Photo courtesy SWA Group
Important Legislation
• HR 4202 The Green Infrastructure for
Clean Water Act of 2009
– Provides grants to states, localities, and other
qualified entities for plan, design and
implementation of green infrastructure projects
that would mitigate stormwater runoff and
address other water quality and quantity issues
HR 4202
– Recommends changes to local ordinances,
permitting processes, and zoning regulation to
encourage the use of Green Infrastructure
solutions
– Establishes a Green Infrastructure program at
EPA to promote the use of green infrastructure
– Creates up to 5 Green Infrastructure centers of
excellence to conduct research and develop
best management practices
Questions?
Roxanne Blackwell
[email protected]
202.216.2334
Kevin O’Hara
[email protected]
202.216.2370