“wise water management for a safer and stronger new orleans” · “wise water management for a...
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“Wise water management for a safer and stronger New Orleans”
We are a group made up of organizations who strive to
educate individuals about wise water management for a
safer and stronger New Orleans.
Water Wise NOLA
1) Neighborhood Water Wise
Workshops: Introduce green infrastructure and how
to incorporate it on your lot.
• Treme/Lafitte: October 2014
• 7th Ward/ St Claude/ Bywater:
November 2014
• Central City: January 2015
• Broadmoor/Zion City/Gert
Town/Hollygrove: February 2015
• Lower 9th Ward: April 2015
• Gentilly: May 2015
• Algiers: June 2015
• Mid City: July 2015
3) Professional Development: Online training to provide professional
development for stormwater
management.
2) Capacity Training: Build capacity in neighborhoods to
address rainwater management.
• Treme/Lafitte/7th Ward/ St Claude/
Bywater: December 2014
• Central City/Broadmoor/Zion
City/Gert Town/Hollygrove: March
2015
• Gentilly/Lower 9th Ward: June 2015
• Algiers: July 2015
• Mid City: August 2015
Participate with us on Instagram!
Follow: waterwisenola
Water Wise NOLA
Managing our Rainwater
Water Cycle
Pumping Water Out
Pumping Water Out
Pumping station at Lake Pontchartrain
Hiding Water
New Orleans: City of Water
New Orleans: City of Water
New Orleans receives 63 inches of rainfall on average per year
making it the second wettest metropolitan in the USA.
Poor Rainwater Management:
Subsidence
Wet sponge vs Dry sponge
Subsidence: What it means for
your neighborhood
Broken Streets
Subsidence: What it means for
your neighborhood
Shifting foundation
Poor Rainwater Management:
Subsidence
Flooding
Flooding due to rainfall will cost Greater New Orleans $8 billion
dollars over the next 50 years.
Street Flooding
April 2013
Street Flooding
July 2012
Thinking Outside of the Pipe
Thinking Outside of the Pipe
Grey Infrastructure: pipes, canals, pumping stations,
water treatment plants, etc
The S&WB of New Orleans currently accomplishes draining 63,000 acres by utilizing 90
miles of covered canals and more than 80 miles of open canals to convey storm water
runoff to 21 drainage pumping stations.
Thinking Outside of the Pipe
Green Infrastructure: Green Infrastructure is the use of
plants and trees to manage rainwater and reduce
flooding.
Typical ditch Ditch with a rain garden
Photo taken at 409 Andry Street (Lower 9th Ward)
Thinking Outside of the Pipe: More examples of Green Infrastructure
Bio Swale at Dillard University
Thinking Outside of the Pipe: More examples of Green Infrastructure
Rain Barrel installed in Gentilly
Thinking Outside of the Pipe: More examples of Green Infrastructure
Green Roof at 409 Andry Street (Lower 9th Ward)
Green Infrastructure:
How it Works
Infiltrate
Filtrate
Detain
Green Infrastructure:
How it Works
Green Infrastructure:
Why it is important
Green Infrastructure and low impact development allows individuals to actively
participate in small scale flood protection through a distributed approach to
managing water. When water is slowed down, held temporarily, and directed
into the soil (infiltrated), it can provide direct benefits on the property.
This approach also reduces the amount of stormwater trying to enter into the
city’s system of pipes until after the peak rains have passed, which reduces the
frequency of street flooding during small scale storm events and also improves
water quality in Lake Pontchartrain and other surrounding water bodies.
Green infrastructure is another tool for flood protection.
Living with Water:
Large Scale Planning
Led by Waggonner and Ball Architects
Visit: www.livingwithwater.org
Living with Water
Assessing your property
Begin with a sketch showing a general
outline of the property, structures and
other hard surfaces
Locate points where rainwater is
concentrated, such as downspouts and
pipes through curbs or walls, and where
it runs off hard surfaces.
Managing Rainwater on Your Lot
Identify where water can be intercepted
(what opportunities exist to manage on-site)
Backyard rain garden
Gravel trench
Planter box
Rain barrel
Stormdrain cleaning
Thank You!!
Please contact me with any questions:
Jeff Supak
(504) 525-2121
Follows us on Instagram:
waterwisenola
Images courtesy of: Waggonner and Ball Architects, Dana Brown
and Associates, Water Works