Innovative Civil Engineering Application Promises
Cleaner Waters
8/28/2007
Blacksburg, VA — Streams, lakes, and bays may soon be cleaner thanks to an
innovative approach to managing stormwater runoff being developed at
Virginia Tech and funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
A novel software application will help engineers and planners select the
most efficient and site specific methods – called “Best Management
Practices” (BMPs) – of controlling the amount of pollutants that enter the
receiving waters through stormwater runoff.
Pollutants are washed off the roads, parking lots, or other surfaces by
stormwater, and include toxic motor oil, pesticides, metals, bacteria, and
trash. The Congressional Research Service reported in 2007 that up to 50
percent of water pollution problems in the United State are attributed to
stormwater runoff.
The application is the product of collaboration between faculty and
researchers from Virginia Tech’s Virginia Water Resources Research Center,
the Center for Geospatial Information Technology in the College of Natural
Resources, and the Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in
the College of Engineering.
The new BMPs selection approach, called Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP),
will factor in dozens of site-specific criteria such as soil types, land
slopes, or maintenance accessibility before choosing the optimal BMPs for a
particular location.
“This technique is expected to drastically reduce the BMP selection time and
will also eliminate the human error from such a complex process,” says
project coordinator Tamim Younos, water center associate director and
research professor of water resources in the Department of Geography in the
College of Natural Resources. Other project leaders include Randy Dymond,
CGIT co-director, and David Kibler, professor of civil and environmental
engineering.
Traditionally, the selection of BMPs has been done only by proficient
stormwater experts guided by little more than vaguely written regulations,
experience, and intuition. “They rely heavily on past knowledge, tradition,
or even personal preference for particular methods of controlling stormwater
runoff,” explains Kevin Young, research associate at CGIT.
Young adds that all too often personal bias has led to “cookie-cutter”
solutions to very complex stormwater management needs, resulting in poor
control of the pollutants.
A widely used, conventional BMP is to build detention ponds near commercial
or residential areas, regardless of the actual construction site needs and
conditions. “The stormwater is directed to a detention pond where gravity
takes over, depositing sediment and some pollutants onto the bottom,” says
Younos. “Pond overflow that still may contain dissolved pollutants reaches
streams, rivers, and lakes, and possibly groundwater.”
Other types of BMPs are trenches and porous pavement that allow the
stormwater to infiltrate the ground, vegetated wetlands, and sand filters
that help sift the pollutants, or proprietary stormwater technologies such
as hydrodynamic separators.
The new tool will be pilot-tested on Town of Blacksburg’s storm water system
and the local Stroubles Creek watershed. The AHP software will be used by
the research team to select BMPs within the watershed contributing runoff to
Stroubles Creek, the town’s main receiving water body. Two existing computer
models will then be used to simulate how efficient the selected BMPs are at
removing the stormwater runoff pollutants.
“The best part about conducting a pilot test on Blacksburg is that the town
will be able to implement our recommendations,” says Younos. “We are very
pleased by the town’s enthusiasm and support for this project.” Other
stakeholders include the New River Planning District Commission, Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality, and Virginia Department of Conservation
and Recreation.
Young discussed the principles of this novel approach to managing stormwater
runoff in his Master’s thesis, under the guidance of the late professor G.
V. Loganathan.
The software, expected to be available next year, will be free for use by
all interested engineers and planners, localities, and BMP review
authorities, and will be applicable in other states with geographic and
climatic environments similar to Virginia.
SOURCE: Virginia Tech
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