| Literature DB >> 29533833 |
Daniel Walsh1, Katherine Glass2, Samantha Morris2, Horace Zhang2, Isabel McRae2, Noel Anderson2, Alysha Alfieri2, Sara Perl Egendorf3, Shana Holberton2, Shahandeh Owrang2, Zhongqi Cheng3.
Abstract
Urban soil is an ongoing source for lead (Pb) and other pollutant exposure. Sources of clean soil that are locally-available, abundant and inexpensive are needed to place a protective cover layer over degraded urban soil to eliminate direct and indirect pollutant exposures. This study evaluates a novel sediment exchange program recently established in New York City (NYC Clean Soil Bank, CSB) and found that direct exchange of surplus sediment extracted from urban construction projects satisfies these criteria. The CSB has high total yield with 4.2 × 105 t of sediment exchanged in five years. Average annual yield (8.5 × 104 t yr-1) would be sufficient to place a 15-cm (6-in.) sediment cover layer over 3.2 × 105 m2 (80 acres) of impacted urban soil or 1380 community gardens. In a case study of sediment exchange to mitigate community garden soil contamination, Pb content in sediment ranged from 2 to 5 mg kg-1. This sediment would reduce surface Pb concentrations more than 98% if it was used to encapsulate soil with Pb content exceeding USEPA residential soil standards (400 mg kg-1). The maximum observed sediment Pb content is a factor of 42 and 71 lower than median surface soil and garden soil in NYC, respectively. All costs (transportation, chemical testing, etc.) in the CSB are paid by the donor indicating that urban sediment exchange could be an ultra-low-cost source for urban soil mitigation. Urban-scale sediment exchange has advantages over existing national- or provincial-scale sediment exchanges because it can retain and upcycle local sediment resources to attain their highest and best use (e.g. lowering pollutant exposure), achieve circular urban materials metabolism, improve livability and maximize urban sustainability. Published by Elsevier Ltd.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29533833 DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2018.03.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Manage ISSN: 0301-4797 Impact factor: 6.789