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Low Impact DevelopmentLynd Morris, NFIP Bureau and Statistical AgentIn natural environments such as forests, rain is intercepted by trees and other vegetation as it falls to the ground. After passing through the forest canopy and bushes, rainwater is absorbed in the soil or is held in small, temporary ponds where it will eventually evaporate into the atmosphere. Except in the case of flash flooding, a relatively small portion of the rainwater falling in forests flows into surface streams. However, significant runoff develops when trees and other vegetation are cleared, soil is scraped off or eroded, and natural depressions in the ground are graded to make a site uniform for new construction. When buildings are erected and roads and parking lots are paved with nonabsorbent materials, rainfall has nowhere to go. Instead of soaking into the ground or evaporating from temporary ponds, rain falling on impervious surfaces quickly runs off. As it travels, water gathers force, debris, and pollutants. It flows across roads, sidewalks, and parking lots, picking up spilled oil, detergents, solvents, road salts, pesticides, and fertilizer and depositing them in small streams and rivers. The increased volume and velocity from the urban runoff resulting from thunderstorms or rapid snowmelt can cause stream banks to erode, carve new channels, and choke waterways with sediment. Flooding can be a serious consequence of urban runoff. Sometimes property damage caused by urban runoff occurs near the point of origination. More frequently, flooding and water pollution resulting from runoff caused by urban development is delivered to communities further downstream. EPA Promotes a Better Way In December 2007, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published Reducing Stormwater Costs through Low Impact Development (LID) Strategies and Practices. This publication explains how Low Impact Development (LID) mitigates the impacts of urban stormwater erosion, pollution, and flooding by mimicking the way rainfall is absorbed and runoff is slowed and filtered in a healthy natural setting. “LID comprises a set of site design approaches and small-scale stormwater management practices that promote the use of natural systems for infiltration, evapotranspiration, and reuse of rainwater,” explains the report. “These practices can effectively remove nutrients, pathogens, and metals from stormwater, and they reduce the volume and intensity of stormwater flows. LID techniques manage water and water pollutants at the source and thereby prevent or reduce the impact of development on rivers, streams, lakes, coastal waters, and ground water.” Managing Runoff, Naturally Instead of removing stormwater as quickly as possible and managing it in large facilities at the bottom of drainage areas (as many older drainage systems were designed to do), LID stormwater management works by installing smaller landscape features onsite to mitigate the volume and rate of runoff while also removing pollutants. LID landscaping features rain gardens, grassed swales, cisterns, rain barrels, permeable pavements, and green roofs. Although LID is typically used to maintain the predevelopment hydrology of a site, it can also be used to retrofit existing developments to reduce runoff volume, speed, and pollutants.
Case Studies Show LID Savings The EPA report summarizes 17 case studies of developments in the United States and Canada where LID practices were used. In most cases, implementing well-chosen LID practices saved money—total capital savings ranged from 15 to 80 percent, with only a few exceptions—for developers, property owners, and communities, while protecting and restoring water quality. EPA anticipates that, as LID practices gain wider use, they will become even less expensive. While the EPA report focuses on the cost reductions and savings achievable through the use of LID practices, it also describes the many amenities and associated economic benefits communities can experience when LID features are installed. "These include improved habitat, improved aesthetics, expanded recreational opportunities, increased property values due to the desirability of the lots and their proximity to open space, increased total number of units developed, increased marketing potential, and faster sales,” says the EPA report.
EPA Recommendations According to the EPA, Reducing Stormwater Costs through Low Impact Development (LID) Strategies and Practices can serve as a primer for low-impact site design and supply background information about the benefits of LID. The report provides developers and planners interested in implementing or promoting LID projects in the community with a breakdown of site development costs for traditional and low impact scenarios, which can be useful when presenting new designs to stakeholder groups who are unfamiliar with LID costs and benefits. More information is available at the EPA Green Infrastructure website and EPA LID website. Lynd Morris began working with the NFIP Bureau and Statistical Agent in 1983. She has been the primary writer and production coordinator for Watermark since 1998. |
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Last updated on October 16, 2008
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