Saturday, May 29, 2010

Denver tolerates no fireworks, so why should Fayetteville weaken its rules?

The only argument that might make me hesitate to think for even a moment before condemning the current discussion by Fayetteville city government about softening the firework ordinance would be that shooting off fireworks on fourth of July is patriotic.
Visit with a Vietnam or middle-east vet living in the hillside woodlands and stream riparizn zones in south Fayetteville and ask about their reactions to the sounds of fireworks. Some may be afraid to talk to you. Others will explain exactly what their generation experienced that led to the replacement of the WWI classification of shell-shocked with "victims of post-dramatic trauma."
If you don't care about the human victims of the intrusive noise of fireworks, how about the thousands of pets that disappear in the vain attempt to escape the pain of firework noise.
Whatever one calls it, a person who has been helpless under heavy fire in battle usually doesn't enjoy fireworks. Especially if he lives as quietly as possible in a Fayetteville forested area and is awakened in his bed on the ground by assorted expensive fireworks lighting the sky above him.

Denver's zero tolerance firework policy outlined

UPDATED: 06/30/2009 07:20:35 PM MDT

Fireworks that are illegal in Denver were displayed at the press conference on June 30, 2009. (THE DENVER POST | RJ SANGOSTI)
Denver has zero tolerance for fireworks.
That means fireworks can't be stored, used, manufactured or sold in Denver.
Today, Denver police and paramedics gathered outside the emergency room at Denver Health Medical Center and used graphic pictures to illustrate why the city has the policy.
Mangled fingers. Mutilated arms. Badly burned hands and faces.
"The only things that are legal are non-ignitable items such as paper-wrapped, small poppers," said Denver Police Technician Dean Christopherson. "We allow nothing that ignites or explodes."
The prohibition includes sparklers.
"The problem with sparklers are that they burn at over a thousand degrees," he said. "They are very flammable. Anything that you have around
them could set a lot of fires."
Christopherson said another consideration is the hope that the "quality of life" can be preserved in Denver.
He said the vast majority of fireworks calls are in the evening as people try to sleep and pets are "trying to get some peace."
Setting off the fireworks wakes some and upsets the pets, he said.
Lt. Scott Homlar, a lieutenant with Denver Paramedic Division, said that annually in the United States between 8,000 and 10,000 emergency room visits are caused by fireworks injuries.
The vast majority of the blast and burn victims are kids 15 years and younger and most injuries occur in the months around July 4th, Homlar said.
"You have to understand that these are little explosives," said Homlar. "Most of the injuries are either to the head or to the extremities — to the hands, eyes, ears and facial injuries."
Christopherson said that so far this year, there have been about 350 complaints about fireworks in Denver, which is half the number of the calls at this time last year.
He said it could be the result of a down economy, a lack of available fireworks or people obeying the law.
He noted that the maximum penalty for setting off fireworks in Denver is a
Paramedic Scott Homlar of Denver Health Medical Center speaks during a press conference to outline the laws and dangers of fireworks on June 30, 2009. (THE DENVER POST | RJ SANGOSTI)
fine up to $999 and one year in jail.
Homlar said he has personally treated people injured by fireworks. "Fortunately, it is not a common occurrence," he said. "I think it is reflective of the law in Denver which makes it illegal for people to even possess the items."
Still, Homlar doesn't want to be a holiday killjoy. "We want you to have a good time, we want you to have an enjoyable 4th of July but we want you to be legal," he said.
To report the use of illegal fireworks in Denver, call police either at 311 or 720-913-2000.
Howard Pankratz: 303-954-1939 or hpankratz@denverpost.com 

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Boozeman, Lincoln and Pryor all promised in 2009 to cooperate to get federal money appropriated to buy sale-barn property; instead, their failure to act has resulted in wet-prairie land north and west of the National Cemetery being dredged and filled for burial sites

Fayetteville National Cemetery photo set. Scroll to bottom of set for more of today's photos This didn't have to happen. Could it be related to the fact that none of the three is a U.S. military veteran? Or did they have more important people's votes in mind? The percentage of veterans who vote is pretty high. The right to vote has always been a reason for many to agree to fight to protect our Democratic form of government. DSCN8289 Please click on image to ENLARGE view of land dredging at Fayetteville National Cemetery on April 23, 2010.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Earth Day Festival began Friday night with Caring for Creation at Mount Sequoyah; Earth Day at World Peace Wetland Prairie from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday, April 18, 2010, offers eduction and fun for all ages

Please click on image to ENLARGE for closer view of sample photos from WPWP.
PLEASE double-click the image to ENLARGE view and ENLARGE further with your computer's tools to read small type. For more about World Peace Wetland Prairie please see www.flickr.com/photos/7295307@N02/collections/ www.flickr.com/photos/7295307@N02/collections/   
PLEASE double-click the image to ENLARGE view and ENLARGE further with your computer's tools to read small type.

MANY REASONS TO PROTECT LAND SUCH AS WORLD PEACE WETLAND AND PINNACLE PRAIRIE FOREVER:
World Peace Wetland Prairie is the riparian zone of a small stream that historically was fed by seep springs and rainwater from three directions when the first westward immigrants settled Fayetteville, Arkansas. World Peace Wetland Prairie has the deepest layer of dark, rich soil in its subwatershed because leaves and other vegetative matter accumulated as the flowing water slowed and soaked into the absorbent soil and enriched that soil. Pinnacle Foods Inc.'s mounded wet prairie to the west is the main source of clean water flowing to World Peace Wetland Prairie at this time. Before the railroad was built, water flowed off Rochier Hill to the northwest and from the prairie and savannah to the north of WPWP that has been replaced by fill dirt and paving for apartments. Water from the east and north slopes of the high land where Pinnacle Foods Inc. now sits flowed to WPWP along with all the water from the high ground near 15th Street, which moved north to WPWP before flowing east to the Town Branch of the West Fork of the White River. Such remnants of prairie help keep the water where it falls and recharge the groundwater. Like the many similar remnants of such prairie in our diverse geographical area, WPWP and Pinnacle Prairie are the surface manifestation of a significant bedrock fault. Such sunken wetland is a characteristic feature that appears above geological faults worldwide. The Karst map of Washington County Arkansas shows the WPWP watershed in red, meaning that it is a critical groundwater recharge area. Preserving such depressional wetland in our city is the least expensive way to reduce downstream flooding and siltation of our water supply. Hundreds of native plants grow. Many birds and other wildlife prosper on healthy wetland vegetation. And prairie vegetation sequesters carbon dioxide and cleans the ground water.

KEEP the WATER where it FALLS!

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

John Bame and Fayetteville High School students look at old rail trestle and discarded rail ties blocking construction of city trail through old tunnel under existing Arkansas & Missouri Railroad

I might not have discovered this for some time had not John Bame brought some FHS students to World Peace Wetland Prairie and then taken them on a walk of the Pinnacle Prairie Trail and the part of Tsa-La-Gi Trail as yet uncompleted from the Hill Place Apartments through the old rail tunnel to the west to Razorback Road and beyond. Thanks to the environmentally aware students for caring and wanting to learn more about the delicate geography and geology of our city. Please click on image to enlarge view of railroad ties over mouth of tunnel and then watch video below the photo to learn reaction of workers when they learned that the ties should not be dumped there.
Rail ties being dumped in mouth of tunnel in Fayetteville AR Aubrey james | MySpace Video The Fayetteville city trail administrator telephoned the railroad manager in Springdale an hour later and the railroad official confirmed that the ties were not to be dumped there but were to be dumped at Cato Springs Road. Rail ties are creosoted and very dangerous to human beings and other living things when the chemicals leach into the watershed.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Restore clean-water act to original strength Now!

Please double-click "view as webpage" link near top right to see full post.
RiverAlert Header
March 22, 2010
keep our nation's waters are protected under the Clean Water Act
Take Action 
Dear Aubrey,
If you think the Clean Water Act protects your drinking water from pollution, think again. Please take action today to ensure fundamental safeguards for clean water in our streams, rivers, and lakes.
A confusing 2006 Supreme Court decision on the Clean Water Act has left the fate of 60 percent of the nation’s stream miles -– that provide drinking water for 117 million Americans –- in legal limbo. As a result, as reported in The New York Times, polluters are now claiming complete exemptions from reporting what they dump into local streams.
Congress can resolve this problem by passing legislation to restore full federal protection for all our waters. Help us ensure that all of our nation’s waters are protected under the Clean Water Act. Urge your representative to support introducing and passing the Clean Water Restoration Act today.
Thank you for your support.
Sincerely, Katherine Baer Signature Katherine Baer Senior Director, Clean Water Program
AR7 Donate ButtonTo contact American Rivers, email us at outreach@AmericanRivers.org. To update your profile or change your preferences click hereTo unsubscribe click here
American Rivers ©2010
I would like to express grave concern over the loss of protection for many of our small streams that provide clean drinking water for 117 million Americans in communities across the country. Supreme Court decisions in the Rapanos and Carabell cases have made it confusing and burdensome for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to protect small streams and wetlands under the Clean Water Act. As a result, enforcement actions against polluters have declined sharply the EPA estimates that over 1,000 cases have been shelved or dropped altogether. More recently it has become clear that some polluters are using the decisions as a justification to avoid any permitting and reporting requirements for discharging pollutants into our waters. For the Clean Water Act to fulfill its goal of restoring the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the nation's waters, all waters must receive protection corresponding with Congress' original intent when passing this landmark law. Upstream waters must be protected from pollution and destruction if we expect downstream waters to be fit for swimming, drinking, and fish and wildlife, and downstream communities to be safe from flooding. I urge you to act in the interest of preserving clean water for healthy communities and wildlife. Please support introduction and passage of the Clean Water Restoration Act, which would clarify the definition of waters to eliminate uncertainty and ensure clean water in accordance with the goals of the Clean Water Act. Thank you for your consideration.

Friday, March 12, 2010

World Peace Wetland Prairie spider milkweed, false indigo bush, dogbane, blue-eyed grass and cottontail rabbit photographed on May 21, 2009

Please click on individual images to ENLARGE view of a sample of what you won't see on Earthday at World Peace Wetland Prairie but may see again if you visit in May. Native wildflowers and tall grass emerge later than the typical nonnative species found in many gardens in Arkansas.
Photo above reveals view northwest with Amorpha fructicosa bush in bloom. Also known as false indigo or indigo bush on May 21, 2009, at World Peace Wetland Prairie. Cottontail rabbit reluctant to leave his grazing area and hoping photographer will back away on May 21, 2009, at World Peace Wetland Prairie.
In photo above, the tiny blue-eyed grass is seen growing near a tall dogbane or Indian Hemp plant.
Above, Asclepias viridis, also known as spider milkweed or antelope horns, is nearing full bloom. Viridis is the earliest of the milkweeds to bloom in Northwest Arkansas. Above is an instance of a tall dogbane or Indian hemp plant with a shorter spider milkweed at right. Dogbane seems always to pop out of the ground before the milkweed and the leaves of the two are similar. Both are plentiful at World Peace Wetland Prairie. For more photos of wildflowers at WPWP, please see WPWP wildflowers

Sunday, February 28, 2010

The case for low-impact development in Arkansas Business special edition or INArkansas

The Case for Low Impact Development

Studies show LID reduced annual phosphorous runoff at Hill Place by 53 percent, ntrogen by 27 percent and sediment by 22 percent as compared to conventional stormwater management.
Late in 2005, just off of the University of Arkansas campus in Fayetteville, 27 acres of land sliced by the Town Branch Creek lay barren. Plans for condominiums on the property were scrapped, leaving neighbors with an eyesore. “Trees had been removed up to the railroad, there was extra noise, extra wind, line of sight issues for some,” said Aubrey Shepherd, co-coordinator for the Town Branch Neighborhood Association in Fayetteville.
But it was worse when it rained. “There were some erosion issues for the railroad embankment,” Shepherd said, a sensitive issue since increased sediment flows could degrade the creek’s aquatic wildlife habitat and large storm flushes could wash out streambed habitat for aquatic invertebrates. And any silt and pollutants that entered the stream ended up in Beaver Lake — the source of Fayetteville’s drinking water.
The remedy came in 2007, when Place Properties purchased the land and hired Appian Centre for Design, a Fayetteville-based landscape planning and architecture company, to work on a student housing proposal. Appian hosted community meetings, which pinpointed water quality concerns, as they worked on the project’s landscape design and decided to employ low impact development for Hill Place as a result.
LID Explained
Low impact development (LID) uses or recreates natural landscape features to mimic predevelopment runoff patterns and allow water to slowly percolate into the subsoil, thereby treating storm water as a resource, not a waste product. “Con ventional development focuses on flood control” using concrete pipe and retention ponds, said John Coleman, Sustainability Director for the City of Fayetteville’s De partment of Sustainability. “LID focuses on water quality and water shed protection.
It also has some biodiversity benefits. It catches fertilizers, nitrogen, phosphorous, and holds them on-site, preventing them from going downstream.” A scientific analysis for Hill Place estimated that a low impact design system would reduce annual phosphorous runoff by 53 percent, nitrogen by 27 percent and sediment by 22 percent as compared to conventional gutter, pipe, and pond stormwater controls.
Typical bio-friendly stormwater management techniques might include rain gardens, bioswales, infiltrations islands and wetlands. Rain gardens, for example, are depressions planted with plant species that increase the soil’s ability to absorb rainwater. Bioswales are wide shallow ditches with vegetation or riprap; they are designed to slowly filter pollutants out of stormwater. Infiltration islands are basically rain gardens planted in parking lots, where they can clean up significant amounts of vehicular pollutants.
After a 2008-09 retrofit, three rain gardens and five bioswales now slow stormwater flow and filter water at Hill Place. Six infiltration islands filter parking lot runoff. A wooded riparian buffer lines the creek running through the property. In all, 24,000 square feet of LID greenery surrounds the apartment complex, which opened in August 2009 and comprises 16 buildings with 288 units.
Financial Factors
Construction of low impact design features is fairly basic — a homeowner could put in a rain garden — although there are certain techniques and plant species considerations, said Todd Jacobs, Appian’s Director of Design. Financially, LID might save a developer 10 percent to 40 percent compared to installing a traditional pipe system, depending on parameters such as topography and site density. With lots of green space available for bio-systems, for example, savings might be closer to 40 percent. A dense urban site might see savings closer to 10 percent.
However, Jacobs acknowledges that savings can be a wash if local ordinances favor traditional stormwater management, resulting in additional regulatory considerations and fees for the LID team. In Fayetteville, Place Properties was willing to commit to the extra design fees.
“If you can get away from the concrete, pipe and curb, and shift that to design fees, you can alleviate some of the design costs,” since traditional concrete features cost more to install than LID features, Coleman said. In 2008, the university received a grant for research on stormwater in Northwest Arkansas communities. “[The City of] Fayetteville is now taking that research and looking at the possibility of implementing LID,” he said. “It means [city ordinances] would allow for rain gardens and bioswales, where in the past, developers didn’t get credit for it.” Water quality in the Beaver Lake watershed is the driver behind the city’s efforts to make the transition to LID-friendly ordinances, he said. That would ultimately lower the planning costs for LID systems.
In fact, the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality’s stormwater permitting language directs municipalities to “evaluate their existing codes and planning procedures to remove impediments to low impact development and green infrastructure.” Ron Tyne, managing member of Rocket Properties, which incorporates LID into its Little Rock development, said there’s been increasing acceptance of LID in the past 10 to 15 years. “There’s a whole lot of education that needs to be done, but once cities know the benefits, they more readily accept it and accommodate it.”
In terms of maintenance, costs are comparable to more traditional systems, according to Jacobs. “If the area wasn’t a bioswale, then it’d be a lawn needing to be fertilized and cut and mulched,” he said. “So the maintenance cost isn’t much more than a typical lawn situation.”
Meanwhile, there’s no denying the higher aesthetic appeal of green spaces incorporated into development design. The Environmental Protection Agency’s Web site lists increased property values, increased marketing potential and faster sales as benefits to the open green spaces of LID. “LID has been around, but when we look at mentor cities, we look at Seattle, Northern Virginia,” Coleman said. “It’s not really widespread — we’re pretty early in the process. You want to look at an existing project like Hill Place and try to learn the positives and negatives before you jump off.” It’s this kind of forward-thinking by the Hill Place team that earned the Appian Centre for Design a 2009 Award for Urban Planning & Design from the Arkansas Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects.
In making the award, the ASLA wrote, “We applaud the client for having the courage in undertaking such a project and suspect that the future success of the project will encourage other developers to follow suit.” Coleman and Jacobs are working in Fayetteville toward making that a reality.

aubrey James Shepherd
February 25, 2010 - 5:10 pm
Please see my lengthy response at http://aubreyshepherd.blogspot.com/2010/02/arkansas-business-story-useful.html


The Case for Low Impact Development


Studies show LID reduced annual phosphorous runoff at Hill Place by 53 percent, ntrogen by 27 percent and sediment by 22 percent as compared to conventional stormwater management.

By Loriee Evans
Published: February 22, 2010, 12:00am
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Late in 2005, just off of the University of Arkansas campus in Fayetteville, 27 acres of land sliced by the Town Branch Creek lay barren. Plans for condominiums on the property were scrapped, leaving neighbors with an eyesore. “Trees had been removed up to the railroad, there was extra noise, extra wind, line of sight issues for some,” said Aubrey Shepherd, co-coordinator for the Town Branch Neighborhood Association in Fayetteville.

But it was worse when it rained. “There were some erosion issues for the railroad embankment,” Shepherd said, a sensitive issue since increased sediment flows could degrade the creek’s aquatic wildlife habitat and large storm flushes could wash out streambed habitat for aquatic invertebrates. And any silt and pollutants that entered the stream ended up in Beaver Lake — the source of Fayetteville’s drinking water.

The remedy came in 2007, when Place Properties purchased the land and hired Appian Centre for Design, a Fayetteville-based landscape planning and architecture company, to work on a student housing proposal. Appian hosted community meetings, which pinpointed water quality concerns, as they worked on the project’s landscape design and decided to employ low impact development for Hill Place as a result.

LID Explained

Low impact development (LID) uses or recreates natural landscape features to mimic predevelopment runoff patterns and allow water to slowly percolate into the subsoil, thereby treating storm water as a resource, not a waste product. “Con ventional development focuses on flood control” using concrete pipe and retention ponds, said John Coleman, Sustainability Director for the City of Fayetteville’s De partment of Sustainability. “LID focuses on water quality and water shed protection.

It also has some biodiversity benefits. It catches fertilizers, nitrogen, phosphorous, and holds them on-site, preventing them from going downstream.” A scientific analysis for Hill Place estimated that a low impact design system would reduce annual phosphorous runoff by 53 percent, nitrogen by 27 percent and sediment by 22 percent as compared to conventional gutter, pipe, and pond stormwater controls.

Typical bio-friendly stormwater management techniques might include rain gardens, bioswales, infiltrations islands and wetlands. Rain gardens, for example, are depressions planted with plant species that increase the soil’s ability to absorb rainwater. Bioswales are wide shallow ditches with vegetation or riprap; they are designed to slowly filter pollutants out of stormwater. Infiltration islands are basically rain gardens planted in parking lots, where they can clean up significant amounts of vehicular pollutants.

After a 2008-09 retrofit, three rain gardens and five bioswales now slow stormwater flow and filter water at Hill Place. Six infiltration islands filter parking lot runoff. A wooded riparian buffer lines the creek running through the property. In all, 24,000 square feet of LID greenery surrounds the apartment complex, which opened in August 2009 and comprises 16 buildings with 288 units.

Financial Factors

Construction of low impact design features is fairly basic — a homeowner could put in a rain garden — although there are certain techniques and plant species considerations, said Todd Jacobs, Appian’s Director of Design. Financially, LID might save a developer 10 percent to 40 percent compared to installing a traditional pipe system, depending on parameters such as topography and site density. With lots of green space available for bio-systems, for example, savings might be closer to 40 percent. A dense urban site might see savings closer to 10 percent.

However, Jacobs acknowledges that savings can be a wash if local ordinances favor traditional stormwater management, resulting in additional regulatory considerations and fees for the LID team. In Fayetteville, Place Properties was willing to commit to the extra design fees.

“If you can get away from the concrete, pipe and curb, and shift that to design fees, you can alleviate some of the design costs,” since traditional concrete features cost more to install than LID features, Coleman said. In 2008, the university received a grant for research on stormwater in Northwest Arkansas communities. “[The City of] Fayetteville is now taking that research and looking at the possibility of implementing LID,” he said. “It means [city ordinances] would allow for rain gardens and bioswales, where in the past, developers didn’t get credit for it.” Water quality in the Beaver Lake watershed is the driver behind the city’s efforts to make the transition to LID-friendly ordinances, he said. That would ultimately lower the planning costs for LID systems.

In fact, the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality’s stormwater permitting language directs municipalities to “evaluate their existing codes and planning procedures to remove impediments to low impact development and green infrastructure.” Ron Tyne, managing member of Rocket Properties, which incorporates LID into its Little Rock development, said there’s been increasing acceptance of LID in the past 10 to 15 years. “There’s a whole lot of education that needs to be done, but once cities know the benefits, they more readily accept it and accommodate it.”

In terms of maintenance, costs are comparable to more traditional systems, according to Jacobs. “If the area wasn’t a bioswale, then it’d be a lawn needing to be fertilized and cut and mulched,” he said. “So the maintenance cost isn’t much more than a typical lawn situation.”

Meanwhile, there’s no denying the higher aesthetic appeal of green spaces incorporated into development design. The Environmental Protection Agency’s Web site lists increased property values, increased marketing potential and faster sales as benefits to the open green spaces of LID. “LID has been around, but when we look at mentor cities, we look at Seattle, Northern Virginia,” Coleman said. “It’s not really widespread — we’re pretty early in the process. You want to look at an existing project like Hill Place and try to learn the positives and negatives before you jump off.” It’s this kind of forward-thinking by the Hill Place team that earned the Appian Centre for Design a 2009 Award for Urban Planning & Design from the Arkansas Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects.

In making the award, the ASLA wrote, “We applaud the client for having the courage in undertaking such a project and suspect that the future success of the project will encourage other developers to follow suit.” Coleman and Jacobs are working in Fayetteville toward making that a reality.





Comments
aubrey James Shepherd
February 25, 2010 - 5:10 pm
Please see my lengthy response at http://aubreyshepherd.blogspot.com/2010/02/arkansas-business-story-useful.html
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The Case for Low Impact Development

Studies show LID reduced annual phosphorous runoff at Hill Place by 53 percent, ntrogen by 27 percent and sediment by 22 percent as compared to conventional stormwater management.

By Loriee EvansPublished: February 22, 2010, 12:00am
Tools
Comment
Print Story
Email to a Friend
Share This Story
Inside a Green Home: A Revenue-Generating Residence
Baldwin & Shell's New Headquarters Reap Perks of LEED
Communities Turning Landfill Pollution Into Profit
Eco-efforts Boost L'Oreal's Bottom Line
Neighborhood Gardens Cultivate Communities in Arkansas
Energy Savers: 9 Energy Fixes That Cost You $0
Tracking Down $110 Million: The Green Portion of Arkansas' Economic Stimulus Funding
4 Arkansas Chefs Share Recipes With Locally Grown Foods
Saving Trash Costs at the Office
Arkansas Green Restaurant Alliance
Late in 2005, just off of the University of Arkansas campus in Fayetteville, 27 acres of land sliced by the Town Branch Creek lay barren. Plans for condominiums on the property were scrapped, leaving neighbors with an eyesore. “Trees had been removed up to the railroad, there was extra noise, extra wind, line of sight issues for some,” said Aubrey Shepherd, co-coordinator for the Town Branch Neighborhood Association in Fayetteville.

But it was worse when it rained. “There were some erosion issues for the railroad embankment,” Shepherd said, a sensitive issue since increased sediment flows could degrade the creek’s aquatic wildlife habitat and large storm flushes could wash out streambed habitat for aquatic invertebrates. And any silt and pollutants that entered the stream ended up in Beaver Lake — the source of Fayetteville’s drinking water.

The remedy came in 2007, when Place Properties purchased the land and hired Appian Centre for Design, a Fayetteville-based landscape planning and architecture company, to work on a student housing proposal. Appian hosted community meetings, which pinpointed water quality concerns, as they worked on the project’s landscape design and decided to employ low impact development for Hill Place as a result.

LID Explained

Low impact development (LID) uses or recreates natural landscape features to mimic predevelopment runoff patterns and allow water to slowly percolate into the subsoil, thereby treating storm water as a resource, not a waste product. “Con ventional development focuses on flood control” using concrete pipe and retention ponds, said John Coleman, Sustainability Director for the City of Fayetteville’s De partment of Sustainability. “LID focuses on water quality and water shed protection.

It also has some biodiversity benefits. It catches fertilizers, nitrogen, phosphorous, and holds them on-site, preventing them from going downstream.” A scientific analysis for Hill Place estimated that a low impact design system would reduce annual phosphorous runoff by 53 percent, nitrogen by 27 percent and sediment by 22 percent as compared to conventional gutter, pipe, and pond stormwater controls.

Typical bio-friendly stormwater management techniques might include rain gardens, bioswales, infiltrations islands and wetlands. Rain gardens, for example, are depressions planted with plant species that increase the soil’s ability to absorb rainwater. Bioswales are wide shallow ditches with vegetation or riprap; they are designed to slowly filter pollutants out of stormwater. Infiltration islands are basically rain gardens planted in parking lots, where they can clean up significant amounts of vehicular pollutants.

After a 2008-09 retrofit, three rain gardens and five bioswales now slow stormwater flow and filter water at Hill Place. Six infiltration islands filter parking lot runoff. A wooded riparian buffer lines the creek running through the property. In all, 24,000 square feet of LID greenery surrounds the apartment complex, which opened in August 2009 and comprises 16 buildings with 288 units.

Financial Factors

Construction of low impact design features is fairly basic — a homeowner could put in a rain garden — although there are certain techniques and plant species considerations, said Todd Jacobs, Appian’s Director of Design. Financially, LID might save a developer 10 percent to 40 percent compared to installing a traditional pipe system, depending on parameters such as topography and site density. With lots of green space available for bio-systems, for example, savings might be closer to 40 percent. A dense urban site might see savings closer to 10 percent.

However, Jacobs acknowledges that savings can be a wash if local ordinances favor traditional stormwater management, resulting in additional regulatory considerations and fees for the LID team. In Fayetteville, Place Properties was willing to commit to the extra design fees.

“If you can get away from the concrete, pipe and curb, and shift that to design fees, you can alleviate some of the design costs,” since traditional concrete features cost more to install than LID features, Coleman said. In 2008, the university received a grant for research on stormwater in Northwest Arkansas communities. “[The City of] Fayetteville is now taking that research and looking at the possibility of implementing LID,” he said. “It means [city ordinances] would allow for rain gardens and bioswales, where in the past, developers didn’t get credit for it.” Water quality in the Beaver Lake watershed is the driver behind the city’s efforts to make the transition to LID-friendly ordinances, he said. That would ultimately lower the planning costs for LID systems.

In fact, the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality’s stormwater permitting language directs municipalities to “evaluate their existing codes and planning procedures to remove impediments to low impact development and green infrastructure.” Ron Tyne, managing member of Rocket Properties, which incorporates LID into its Little Rock development, said there’s been increasing acceptance of LID in the past 10 to 15 years. “There’s a whole lot of education that needs to be done, but once cities know the benefits, they more readily accept it and accommodate it.”

In terms of maintenance, costs are comparable to more traditional systems, according to Jacobs. “If the area wasn’t a bioswale, then it’d be a lawn needing to be fertilized and cut and mulched,” he said. “So the maintenance cost isn’t much more than a typical lawn situation.”

Meanwhile, there’s no denying the higher aesthetic appeal of green spaces incorporated into development design. The Environmental Protection Agency’s Web site lists increased property values, increased marketing potential and faster sales as benefits to the open green spaces of LID. “LID has been around, but when we look at mentor cities, we look at Seattle, Northern Virginia,” Coleman said. “It’s not really widespread — we’re pretty early in the process. You want to look at an existing project like Hill Place and try to learn the positives and negatives before you jump off.” It’s this kind of forward-thinking by the Hill Place team that earned the Appian Centre for Design a 2009 Award for Urban Planning & Design from the Arkansas Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects.

In making the award, the ASLA wrote, “We applaud the client for having the courage in undertaking such a project and suspect that the future success of the project will encourage other developers to follow suit.” Coleman and Jacobs are working in Fayetteville toward making that a reality.





aubrey James Shepherd
February 25, 2010 - 5:10 pm
Please see my lengthy response at http://aubreyshepherd.blogspot.com/2010/02/arkansas-business-story-useful.html
report abuse
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InArkansas.com: your guide for all things Arkansas, including where to Eat, Live, Shop, Play, Visit and Work in the Natural State. Here, find exactly what you're looking for in restaurants and shopping directories; plan weddings and events; and stay abreast of the most fashionable parties and fundraisers. See videos, photos and blogs. Use our Highly Recommended voting system to share your favorite businesses and events. And get our free Daily Recommends e-news for editors' picks of the best in Arkansas dining, gifts, events and more.

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