Water Sensitive Urban Design - A Council Planners Perspective ? Mike Mouritz Director Environment & Planning Wollongong City Council examples from Kogarah My talk today       To help set set the.

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Transcript Water Sensitive Urban Design - A Council Planners Perspective ? Mike Mouritz Director Environment & Planning Wollongong City Council examples from Kogarah My talk today       To help set set the.

Water Sensitive Urban
Design
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A Council Planners
Perspective ?
Mike Mouritz
Director Environment & Planning
Wollongong City Council
examples from Kogarah
My talk today
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To help set set the context
Consider the what, why, who and how of
WSUD
Look at some examples
I hope to be a little provocative - push my
barrow
Perspective based on my experiences
WSUD - term either loved or hated by
practitioners and urban development
community
Values and Urban Water Technology
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No technology is value free
Technologies are politics in disguise, or the result
of interplay of - politics - values - technical knowledge
Based on public health needs of 100 plus years
ago
Notions from the “Enlightenment” & “modernist”
traditions – applied science could master then
environment
– economies of scale
– human health much more important than
ecological health
Sanitary Conditions
Floods Are Real
Problems with 19th Century Urban
Water Management
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Receiving waters cannot sustain organic loads and,
especially nutrient loads from outfalls.
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Urban creeks and wetlands are now valued inherently
i.e. for their ecological and recreational qualities
rather than their ability to channel or dilute wastes.
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Stormwater from sprawling bitumen-based cities is
excessive in quantity and quality.
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Cost of “big pipes” infrastructure is becoming too
high.
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Water supply augmentation solutions are becoming
economically and environmentally questionable.
(Source: Newman & Mouritz 1994)
Times of Transition - The Shift is
Occurring
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Ecological integrity of urban and near
waterways - (i.e. Brisbane River & Morton
Bay)
CSIRO 1992 & recent reports - highlighting
rethink of research priorities
World Water Vision & Framework for Action
Asset management & replacement challenge
“Why are we cracking up” - SMH - 25/7/00
Ageing pipes and Murky Waters - NZ
Urban Policy is Shifting
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More livable
More efficient in terms of land and
infrastructure
More efficient in terms of energy and
resource use
Even debate on “ecological footprint”
(i.e. Sydney draws on 37 times it’s area)
Water-oriented Goals for a
Sustainable City
Reduced import of water into cities.
 Ocean and river outfalls made redundant.
 Recycling of water for various urban and peri-urban
uses.
 Recycling of nutrients and organics.
 Creeks and wetlands an integral part of city and
managed for their ecological integrity.
 Increased soft surfaces (and reduced urban sprawl) for
stormwater retention.
 Reduced requirements for large pipes.
(Source: Newman and Mouritz 1994)
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WSUD - Planning & Design Concept
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Codify emerging values
Part of new paradigm
Optimise and integrate urban
planning and management of urban
water cycle
Range of scales and time horizons
“A more humble and unified way of conceiving the
relationship between earth, water and human life”
(Cosgrove 1990)
WSUD - a Tool for Catchment
Repair
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I mean “repair” not just
management or “spinning wheels”.
Catchment repair is about
leadership - “developing the path
forward”.
Repair implies improvement.
Re-generative approach to
stormwater - part of an urban
ecology that is healing.
Vision of a Co-evolution of Human
Settlements and Ecosystem
Hard and soft
technologies designed and applied to optimise
the production /consumption system of
the city in terms of health of regional
ecosystem, as well as human health and
welfare.
WSUD
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Optimising the rain that falls on the city water harvesting.
Reducing the amount of water imported into
the city.
Optimising water balance and flood
management.
Improving water quality.
Incorporating water related social &
ecological objectives.
Spirit of the water.
The WSUD Guidelines
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Menu of best planning and best
management practices.
Research and consultancy projects
illustrated the viability and potential.
But some got the perception it was just
about swales and wetlands
“Treatment trains” - hard and soft
solutions.
Even linking art, architecture,
technology and ecology.
Recipes - design manuals being
developed (Marino Evangilisti & Tony
Wong in WA).
The Ideal - a Policy Framework
of Agreed:
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Urban design / planning
outcomes
Environmental objectives
Water resource objectives
Plus design and approval
process that support
these
Design teams that know
how to innovate
Concept is Evolving - developing
meaning of its own
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Because it can capture the imagination of
practitioners & developers.
Inspired by Tony Wong and others in
developing water quality design tools.
Water harvesting practice and analysis of
John Argue, Peter Coombes, George Kuczera.
Realising distributed systems envisioned by
Richard Clark and others in scenario work.
In a Wider Context
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Consistent with best European & US & Japanese
practice.
i.e. - “New Ways with Rainwater” Gieger & Dreiseitl.
Within a more academic / discipline development
context.
Part of ecological conditions / opportunities approach rather than constraints approach.
Consistent with labels like ecosystem planning,
ecological design, ecotechnologies.
About linking ecological planning/design with ecological
engineering.
Berlin’s Potsdamer Platz
Integrated
design
Overcoming Barriers Examples
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Two Urban Renewal
 Allawah
 Kogarah Town Square
 DCP Controls
Two Wetland
 Moore Reserve
Location Map
Kogarah Town
Centre
Moore Reserve
Allawah
Carss Park
Allawah -The Design Proposed:
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Solar passive design and natural ventilation
which would theoretically save 70% energy
on comparable development.
Rainwater reuse for irrigation, toilet flushing.
38 of the 42 bathrooms and car washing
saves 600, 000 l/year.
Stormwater & flood control coupled to
landscape and sub-surface treatment
proposed to treat 93% of run-off.
Water Achievements
Treatment of up to 1:3
month flood control.
 Rainwater for irrigation,
car washing, toilet
flushing for 38 or 42
bathrooms.
EQUALS
 600,000 litres of potable
water saved.
 93% of stormwater
treated to tertiary
standard.
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Passive Solar & Ventilation
What We Learnt
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It can be done … and is cost effective … on paper.
Some of the Councillors believed we lost $$$ on the
land sale.
The developers bought without looking - but
looked for modification during construction.
Half the job - modifications where approved by
others, so much of the innovation was lost.
The development controls set the value land; what
can be built and how,
Councils can/should build in the controls to get the
outcomes they are looking for.
Confidence to implement firm stormwater controls
in our normal Development Controls.
Kogarah Town Square
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10,000 m2 site, where a mixed-use complex
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Approximately 3000m2 retail and commercial, 190
apartments,
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A 1400m2 public library and underground public
parking.
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New Town Square
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Best practice urban and environmental design features
- Solar Kogarah & WSUD
partnerships
HIGHTRADE
Cultivate opportunities
kogarah the vibrant alternative
Environmental design
large livable terraces
bathrooms and kitchens
located on external walls
cross ventilation
high thermal mass
active street edges
space and light and air
Integrated design outcome
Aspiring for quality
Water System Design
Water System Design
Objectives
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detention - flood control
conservation
treatment - receiving waters
awareness - public awareness
aesthetics - quality of design & construction
Design Principles
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fit for purpose
recycling
minimise treatment
design to match objectives
Design Criteria
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structural implications
buildability
maintainability
cost effectiveness - avoidance of duplication
Surface Areas
Area
Roof
5172.6
sqm
55%
770.6
sqm
8%
1497.6
sqm
16%
634.5
sqm
7%
Townsquare
1257.0
sqm
13%
Total
9332.3
sqm
Terrace
Landscape
Setback
“Clean”
64%
36%
“Dirty”
Private Terraces
All
770 sqm
Roofs
Town
5172 sqm
square
Landscape courts
1257 sqm
1497 sqm
GPT
Screen/ silt
trap
Screen/silt
trap
Control tank
Control tank
at high level
at high level
Potable water topup
Filter /
disinfection
Balance
Main Storage 1clean
Main Storage 2dirty
Toilet flush+
Carwash
Irrigation
OKeefes
Lane
Water Feature
Control pit
Pump/sump
Sewer
Stormwater
Flows
Kogarah - its happening
Moore Reserve
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14.2 ha
Rubbish tip until late 1970’s
2 square kilometre catchment
Ecological restoration strategy
– off line wetland
– leachate treatment
– bushland restoration
– recreation
– investigated landfill
Consultation
Moore
Reserve
Masterplan version 1
Artist impression that went wrong
Agreed
Masterplan
 Funds from
Stormwater
Trust
 Georges
River
Foreshore
trust
 Council
Moore Reserve Wetland
Construction
Kogarah DCP Controls - Objectives
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Manage flooding
Pollution prevention
Encourage reuse
Minimise changes to natural hydrology
Cost effective stormwater systems
Establish standards
Impervious
Surface area the main
control
Techniques
Other techniques
Funding Catchment Repair
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Challenge of delivering Stormwater
management plans
Significant scale - no mechanism to
implement across Sydney
Kogarah $10 million - first phase
50,000 people, 18,000 households
Scaled up to Sydney - $700 Million to
$1Billion
Threshold problems need bold political
responses
The Funding / Policy Proposal
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Establish ‘institutional arrangement’ - councils
and/or trusts and/utilities to borrow at state
government loan rates.
Create a “loan pool” of up to $1 Billion for
long term - low interest public infrastructure
financing endorsed by the Treasury.
Establish a “catchment repair” levy collected
by councils / trusts.
Implement community agreed catchment
repair plans.
Back of envelope calculations
 Borrow $700 million @ 6% over 30 years with
monthly repayments of $ 4,196,854 per month.
 Sydney's population of 4 million people with
average household size 2.7/household equates
to a rate-base of 1,476,564 households.
Therefore, monthly repayment per household is
approximately = $2.84/hsld/mth. Allowing for
exempting for low income - under $1 per week
per household.
Catchment repair service as
business opportunity
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Stream restoration, flood management, open space
improvement, localised water harvesting.
May also become a developer - to redevelop areas
along drains.
Outcome higher quality housing and living steams.
In new subdivisions integrated water services water / waste/ compost/vegetation management.
Might sell nutrient rich water and feed stock into
eco-industrial cluster.
Identifying Barriers
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“Green technologies”- hindered by
technical, economic, institutional
barriers.
New “artifacts” don’t fit the selection
environment / institutions which
supports old regime.
“Power relationships” often hinder
innovation - usually professionals and their
bureaucracies - change is slow if not cultivated.
Impediments
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Physical mismatch
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Know-how mismatch
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Financial
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Institutional inertia
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Lack of community acceptability
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Political
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World -views/belief systems
Summary - Enhancing Innovation
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Covered some history, philosophy, practice,
my vision
Dialogue - reflection, sharing, considering provoking our imagination
Catchment repair - explicit about our values ‘big P - little p’
Enhance our technical know how and
community ownership
Priorities - Policy Framework
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World views - be clear about our values
and our goals
Selling catchment repair
Institutional arrangement - overcoming
resistance
Policy integration - range of scales and
time horizons
Priorities - Professional Praxis
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Willingness to integrate across institutions and
professional boundaries
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Partnerships - public / public - public / private
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Role of professional bodies - facilitate
Priorities - Technical Know-how
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Ecological literacy - understanding the
nature of the place
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Menus, recipes, ingredients guidelines, manuals & tools
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Working with community - building
skills
Priorities - Demonstration
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Learning by doing - document
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Outside the square - most creative
innovation outside the systems
Finally
Herbert Dreiseitl
"Water is the precious life
substance of the earth. Its
value to the environment,
climate and life of our world
will be increasingly
recognised. Violated,
humiliated, piped,
contaminated, less and less
can it unfold its selfless
qualities and fulfil its lifesupporting task. Awareness,
care and perceptive
consciousness are being
asked of humanity."