ONTD Political

Philadelphia cleans up city water with new paving type, landscaping, and rainbarrels

2:52 pm - 06/07/2012


Last year, Philadelphia faced a crime "first"—the theft of city-provided rain barrels. In a backhanded way, the crime was a tribute to the success of the city's new Green City Clean Waters program.

"You know when you've arrived when people value something enough to steal it,"
says Chris Crockett, the Philadelphia Water Department's deputy commissioner of environmental services.

In a unique effort to address the city's storm-water runoff problem, improve streets, benefit the community, and create jobs, the Philadelphia Water Department (PWD) has opted for green infrastructure solutions rather than simply digging new tunnels and storage tanks to hold runoff.

The city is relying on a combination of solutions including green roofs, porous paving, storm-water planters, rain gardens, and, of course, the coveted rain barrels.
Crockett had hoped to encourage Philadelphia's residents to take a role in keeping their water clean, little expecting the program would be so popular that people would impersonate others to get their rain barrels.

In April, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the City of Philadelphia signed an agreement that will result in a $400,000 investment in Philadelphia's Green City Clean Waters program. This is in addition to the PWD's commitment of $1.2 billion (in today's dollars) drawn from water and sewer billing for green infrastructure over 25 years, which had been announced at the launch of Green City Clean Waters in 2010. That plan was widely hailed as an ambitious use of environmentally friendly solutions and helped the city rank first in the Natural Resources Defense Council's November 2011 report on green infrastructure.

Shawn M. Garvin, EPA regional administrator for the area encompassing Philadelphia, notes that the Green City Clean Waters program represents a shift in focus. "We spent a lot of time trying to clean water after it's polluted," says Garvin. "Now we're focusing on how to keep water from coming into contact with pollution in the first place. The likelihood is that this will be significantly more cost-effective than gray infrastructure."

The "Combined Sewer System"

The Schuylkill and Delaware rivers come together at Philadelphia, providing the city with its drinking water as well as popular and attractive waterfronts. As in many other U.S. cities, when bad weather overwhelms the storm-sewer system, the rivers become receptacles for untreated sewage and rainwater that picks up garbage, oil, and chemicals from parking lots and streets.

This is the result of what's referred to as a "combined sewer system," which brings together in the same pipes storm water from streets, businesses, and homes, as well as residential and commercial sewage. With tunnels that make up 60 percent of Philadelphia's sewer system, the combined sewer system serves more than three-quarters of Philadelphians, and covers 64 square miles. When these systems get hit by more water than they can carry to water treatment, the excess is released into the Schuylkill, Delaware, and other waterways at 164 combined sewer outflow (CSO) points, events that can happen up to 85 times a year.

Although these CSOs are sited downstream from drinking water intakes, the pollution can affect wildlife, fishing, and swimming.
Within Philadelphia, as Crockett notes, the PWD's waterways restoration unit "pulls tons and tons of trash out of the streams every year."

The Green City Clean Waters program requires that green infrastructure be capable of keeping one inch of rainwater out of the storm-water system in a 24-hour period. Crockett explains that this will capture all of the water from 80 percent of the storms Philadelphia experiences.

This is no small amount of water: One acre of land in the city will receive approximately 1 million gallons of rainfall annually. In fact, the city already requires the capture of 1.5 inches for municipal projects.

Philly's Long History of Water Innovation

Philadelphia's history of water-related invention extends back at least to Ben Franklin's swim fins and glass armonica, but the city is less well known for an invention that will soon cover a sizable portion of it—permeable paving. Developed at the city's Franklin Institute in 1977, permeable (also known as "porous" or "pervious") paving provides a surface tough enough to bear traffic while allowing water to seep through its matrix and into the soil, eliminating surface pooling.

An integral part of Philadelphia's green streets plan, permeable paving will replace 15 square miles of impervious paving within the city's CSO area in a little over 20 years. As Crockett notes, that's the equivalent of more than a thousand city blocks.

The city is also testing a variety of designs for other street elements—including 20 different types of tree trenches. Above ground, these look no different from street tree plantings elsewhere, but below the paving the structure is engineered to hold water to nourish the trees and allow some to enter the ground beneath.

When it's impractical to store water in the ground, green street engineers store it in the air. Flow-through planters take runoff from rooftop gutters and hold it in planter boxes until it returns to the atmosphere via "evapotranspiration" from leaves. Rain gardens set in low-lying areas where runoff can pool use both evapotranspiration and groundwater infiltration to store water.

As for the rain barrels, although they can hold only a small amount of water and must be emptied between storms, they are free on a one-barrel-per-household basis to Philadelphia residents who attend the PWD's educational workshop on installation and use. Since rain-barrel water can be used for gardening, watering lawns, or washing down patios and driveways, the tap water conserved could help lower water bills, perhaps explaining the degree of interest in them.
Crockett, however, argues that residents genuinely want to help, and notes that Philadelphians also clamored for curbside recycling bins upon their introduction.

Progress to Date

So far, the city has completed 35 green street blocks, and by the end of the year expects to have boosted that total to 215. The PWD has removed 10,000 square feet of impervious paving. Sixteen green school projects have been completed and private businesses are now engaged in approximately 300 greening projects. The city also has an incentive program for storm-water billing that grants close to a 100 percent credit for green retrofits.

Of particular interest is the demonstration project at George W. Nebinger School in South Philadelphia. The schools' rain gardens, porous play surfaces, and other green features will serve as teaching tools in an environmental curriculum emphasizing the role of water.

"Students are our environmental stewards," says Garvin. "They are our best messengers at home and in the community. Partnering with Nebinger and the students and putting practices on the ground we're getting many bangs for our buck."


Adding salience to the effort is a study showing that green infrastructure may also provide significant health and social benefits. "The green infrastructure program is not just a 25-year program but a 50-to-100-year program in which the people who are underserved and underemployed will have job opportunities in their communities," says Crockett. "And people who work in their communities tend to invest in their communities."

source: national geographic
This basically addresses "non-point pollution". Big polluters are heavily regulated. But the thousands of individual sources that are unregulated: , leaks, litter, lawn chemicals, oil/gas/coolent spilled in auto wrecks, etc can add up WAAAAAY more output than actual regulated sources. avoiding it ending up in the water stream to beginning with is most efficient way of dealing with it.
popehippo 7th-Jun-2012 07:39 pm (UTC)
This is neat!
andthelight 7th-Jun-2012 07:44 pm (UTC)
I didn't know about this, and I'm from the Philly area! Cool stuff.
dogonwheels827 7th-Jun-2012 08:06 pm (UTC)
It's great to see a city actually making an effort to mitigate non-point source pollution and educate their public! I wish we had more initiatives like this in my city.
christoph 7th-Jun-2012 08:16 pm (UTC)
My best friend lives in Philly and we were just talking about this the other day. It's wonderful that the green movement is being taken seriously and is becoming more and more popular. I hope other cities follow their example.
fenris_lorsrai 7th-Jun-2012 08:25 pm (UTC)
The area around Pittsburgh's convention center is pretty sweet too. They had some similar storm water trapping designs with trees and actually had informational signs out explaining how it worked.
Click to make readable:
Pittsburgh trees

This is actually a parking garage!
Parking Garage, Pittsburgh by Omni William Penn
they just took advantage of natural hillside to put the parking underneath and put the park on top. Nobody wants to park on the top anyway where they get rained on, so very clever.


This is part of the convention center's cooling system:
Under Pittsburgh convention center
Water feature- Pittsburgh Convention Center

That's an outdoor water recyling system for the cooling system. It drops down the sides and then cascades through the pools to maximize surface area and shed heat through evaporation. Then its cycled back into the building and filtered before going back through the cooling system.
christoph 7th-Jun-2012 09:02 pm (UTC)
That's awesome! I love seeing stuff like this because we have nothing like it where I live; we just can't get the funding. These are both really cool but the soil cell is just such a neat idea. Out of curiosity, how many trees have that installed around them?

Edited at 2012-06-07 09:02 pm (UTC)
fenris_lorsrai 7th-Jun-2012 09:23 pm (UTC)
I'm not sure. they only had the signs up in that area, so probably only where they were doing new construction or replanting trees that had died. so definitely NOT all the trees in Pittsburgh, just the ones that were planted after 2009/2010 or so. I have no idea how many other cities are using something similar.
nova_night 7th-Jun-2012 10:59 pm (UTC)
I have to agree that this in indead awesome.

I love to see that cites are doing this. Sure it may take a while to have whole city upgraded to this this system, I have to be happy with each step we get closer to eco friendly cites.
kira_snugz 8th-Jun-2012 12:58 am (UTC)
that is amazing. especially the outdoor water recycling system it looks so so pretty.
countrygirl_914 8th-Jun-2012 05:26 am (UTC)
I live here but haven't been to the convention center, so I hadn't seen that before! So cool!

I think I have parked in that parking garage before, though, or at least one like it, and I have to say--it may be clever, but it was the darkest, closest, most claustrophobic parking garage I've ever been in. Not sure I'd park there again--I was so worried I was going to hit another car.
mysid 7th-Jun-2012 08:33 pm (UTC)
In addition to reducing non-point pollution, a big plus of all these efforts to deal with stormwater runoff is the effect upon the sewage/rainwater systems. Philadelphia, like many other cities, uses the same underwater pipes to handle both sewage and rainwater. When a storm is very large, the amount of water flowing through the system can overwhelm the water treatment plants.

By diverting much of the rainwater into gardens, rain barrels, etc, less water floods into the water treatment plants all at once. This reduces the likelihood that raw sewage/rainwater mix will be released into the river untreated, and it reduces or eliminates the need to build a larger sewage treatment plant.
sparkindarkness 7th-Jun-2012 09:01 pm (UTC)
This is rerally impressive - it's nice to see a city actually do something integrated and sensible about pollution - and helping the city along the way
babysinclair 8th-Jun-2012 12:34 am (UTC)
bud sadly like everything else that is cool in Philly, like the solar trash cans, they will only help Center City/South Street/University City/Sports Complex cause thy don't care about anyone else.
bestdaywelived 8th-Jun-2012 12:46 am (UTC)
That's really awesome. I'm really excited that something like this can work in Philadelphia.

I think the next step needs to be to stop littering and bust litterbugs and smokers who throw butts on the ground. I'm shocked by how beautiful the city looks in these photos, nice and clean. I am 100% behind making the city a nicer, greener place for all, so YAY.
maladaptive 8th-Jun-2012 12:12 pm (UTC)
I am normally a non-violent person, but my bike route takes me through a nature preserve (mangrove hammock) and all the litter I see makes me long for the ability to put a satellite in the sky that will zap litterbugs.

There is no excuse for that shit. Maybe if you're running from an axe-murderer. Otherwise walk the twenty feet to the trash can or keep it in your car!

I was amazed by the cigarette butts everywhere in Philly though. I went to UPenn and it was like a carpet.
bestdaywelived 8th-Jun-2012 09:26 pm (UTC)
So many people in Philadelphia are gross and inconsiderate. It makes me sad because I LOVE the city. Watching people eat lunch and throw the wrappers makes me want to punch a wall.
romp 8th-Jun-2012 05:11 am (UTC)
Wouldn't this help with storm water run-off too? I recall seeing in Dirt, the documentary, that LA gets all the water it needs in rain but that it just runs off the paved streets and into the ocean (along with detergents, oil, etc).

This is the sort of green industry that was being advanced to help the economy *and* country, yeah? Nice.
lolahead 8th-Jun-2012 02:48 pm (UTC)
I love Philly, and was born and raised in the area. I just think it's funny that people are stealing the city rain barrels....so typical of the unbrotherly love.

But seriously...Philly has really come a long way in the past 10 years. It has really cleaned up nice. Nice enough for me to finally say that I'm proud to be from Philly and I love it.
babysinclair 8th-Jun-2012 03:43 pm (UTC)
But only the touristy areas are really clean though. they made no efforts outside those areas. I can go blocks without hitting a trashcan provided by the city in my area.
lolahead 8th-Jun-2012 04:08 pm (UTC)
It's true, but it's still a lot better than it used to be. I remember the city being completely filthy in the 80s and 90s...even in the touristy areas. And some of the up and coming neighborhoods like Northern Liberties weren't even safe to travel through.
bestdaywelived 8th-Jun-2012 09:30 pm (UTC)
I wish that there was like a litter campaign starting with preschoolers to make up for the lack of home training that so many people seem to lack in Philly. Watching people throw their trash on the ground and smoke in the Broad Street Line makes me sick.

FWIW, I was told by a Philly cop a while ago that the reason some neighborhoods couldn't have trash cans provided by the city was because people were picking them up and smashing windshields.
tabaqui 8th-Jun-2012 04:52 pm (UTC)
This is so very cool. I love using actual living plants and gardens and plain old *dirt* as a solution. A city nearby where most of my family lives has *huge* flooding issues every time it rains - the streets flood and become rivers, everything overflows, parking lots disappear - it's ridiculous.

And most of it is down to way too much concrete, not nearly enough green.
dragonhawker 8th-Jun-2012 11:04 pm (UTC)
Very educational. Thanks for posting!
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