| Literature DB >> 23548508 |
John Sansalone1, Saurabh Raje, Ruben Kertesz, Kerrilynn Maccarone, Karl Seltzer, Michele Siminari, Peter Simms, Brandon Wood.
Abstract
The built environs alter hydrology and water resource chemistry. Florida is subject to nutrient criteria and is promulgating "no-net-load-increase" criteria for runoff and constituents (nutrients and particulate matter, PM). With such criteria, green infrastructure, hydrologic restoration, indirect reuse and source control are potential design solutions. The study simulates runoff and constituent load control through urban source area re-design to provide long-term "no-net-load-increases". A long-term continuous simulation of pre- and post-development response for an existing surface parking facility is quantified. Retrofits include a biofiltration area reactor (BAR) for hydrologic and denitrification control. A linear infiltration reactor (LIR) of cementitious permeable pavement (CPP) provides infiltration, adsorption and filtration. Pavement cleaning provided source control. Simulation of climate and source area data indicates re-design achieves "no-net-load-increases" at lower costs compared to standard construction. The retrofit system yields lower cost per nutrient load treated compared to Best Management Practices (BMPs).Entities:
Keywords: Biofiltration; Hydrology; Nutrients; Permeable pavement; Reuse; Stormwater
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23548508 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2013.01.051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071