January-February 2004

Modeling For Erosion Prevention

Software helps engineers and planners handle stormwater runoff and water-quality concerns.

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By Janis Keating

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Rainfall isn't the only moisture to take into consideration; Wisconsin has long, snowy winters. "You do need to be concerned about frozen ground," Lockwood points out. "For example, if you had a storm at the end of February when the ground is frozen, you have to keep this in mind; when it's still frozen, the ground is impervious."

After determining the figures for the "virgin prairie" first, Lockwood used HydroCAD to discover how to meet the same criteria. "We get another map with the site marked on it, along with its proposed grading. In our case, we used open channels to move the runoff. Let's say a 50-acre watershed that was prairie now has 4 acres covered with concrete. We'd be draining off a parking lot into a grass channel into the outlet point. We use detention basins; the model allows you to put a pond at the outlet of the site. In fact, we put in a pond for peak control and sediment control, yet it's also for aesthetic reasons; Epic will probably put an aerator in it.

"We didn't need any draining pipes," Lockwood continues. "We used grass swales, which you can model in HydroCAD's pond node, and with gabion baskets we made a weir structure. That's how the pond gets drained. That drainage rate is what you compare to the preexisting rate. The ponds have been built, and the construction crews are now working on everything else. It's part of the ordinance that stormwater features have to go in first. The site will use some permeable parking areas; for example, [it will use] Geoblock on some access drives for the fire department."

Not only did Lockwood have to deal with the runoff, but he also had to control its temperature. The site was thermally sensitive. "The Sugar River is cold water, so we had to make sure the heat of the runoff water stayed a certain temperature. Controlling temperature is a budding science. We had to run the water underground, where temperatures are 55°[Farenheit], and hold the runoff there for the five- to 20-minute interval when the asphalt or concrete was giving off its heat during the first minutes of a rainstorm. We used a rock trench. Water flows into that to hold it for a while, to dissipate the heat."

In the past, D'Onofrio Kottke used USDA's TR-55 and the Virginia Tech/Penn State Urban Hydrology Model. "Neither of the previous programs was as user-friendly," Lockwood notes. HydroCAD also generates the reports needed for a plan's approval process. "We print out reports to take to Verona with drainage maps to explain how we got to the answer, which they would then pass on to their reviewing engineer, who would look it over and make comments. We also had to give reports to the [Wisconsin] Department of Natural Resources, the [Dane] County Regional Planning Commission, and the Dane County Land Conservation Board. The approval process used to be a quick look by the state or county; now it's months of review. With the increasing number of regulations, agencies, and individuals getting into the stormwater issue and making it a concern, HydroCAD helps us meet the criteria and helps us explain processes to approval committees."

Holding—and Hiding—the Stormwater
"In two recent projects, we needed to design infiltration chambers according to NPDES Phase II regulations for an office building in Redhook, New York, and a 12-apartment building for seniors in Poughkeepsie," reports Wendy Berger, P.E., CPESC, of Poughkeepsie, NY's Berger Engineering and Surveying. "The drainage system was required to hold a two-year storm. You want to know storm and drainage peaks so you'll know what you will need to build to hold that whole storm."

Accounting for different types of storms once required more calculations. "We used to have to put in all the coverage of the area if we wanted to print out two-year storm reports. Then we had to start all over again if we wanted to show projections for a 10-year storm," Berger explains. "With HydroCAD 6.4, we can do it all at once; we run figures for different storms simultaneously. This is especially useful because, although we're required to treat the two-year storm, when we're able to - due to the budget, for example - we hold the 10-year storm as well."

Recent upgrades have made the model easier to use. "We used to have to give a diagram of the site, one we made by hand, along with the flow charts. Now if I want to describe sites in more detail, instead of 'node,' I can mark it as 'shed one, shed two,' et cetera. HydroCAD does have limited nodes on versions, but you can reimport the data and make 'shed A, B, C, D,' and so on if the area requires more nodes. You just tell the program: 'Import those same values that I had from pond five.' You're not losing the data."
Modeling has helped Berger solve another stormwater-related problem. "Infiltration ponds were becoming liability problems for property owners, so we started putting in infiltration chambers, usually under a parking lot," she explains. "We make sure the chambers under the parking lot are secure. We build for H-20 loading [as defined by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, a vehicle weight of 36,000 pounds per axle]. Just don't skimp on your stone or on the height of soil over your infiltration chamber - as most chambers today are made of plastic - and there should be no cave-ins from the parking lot, even with all the weight [chambers] carry."

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Once a project is completed, however, Berger's work is far from finished. "The irony is you can't really predict erosion. You put in what you think will best hold the soil, but then you need to field-check from time to time; where you think the water will go - sometimes it flows someplace else. We're constantly checking and correcting sites we've worked on. We try to keep everything as stable as possible with vegetation, although on higher slopes we'll use Curlex or polyester-lined channels. For a really high slope, we'll use riprap or line the ditch with interlocking grid pavers."

Underground Retention
Consulting Engineer Edwin Minnick, P.E., in Berwick, ME, has used quite a few modeling programs in his long career. "After 32 years with the Soil Conservation Service, I entered the public sector, joining a consulting engineering firm located here in Maine. When I began my consulting services in 1992, I used the SCS's Technical Release 20 project formulation hydrology for all my drainage review modeling. Somewhere in the mid 1990s, I was introduced to HydroCAD and have been using it almost exclusively ever since." Next Page >

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