By
Mike DeBonis, Thursday, December 6, 2:56 PM
D.C.
Water and city government officials are proposing to divert runoff from severe
storms into holding facilities before it threatens to inundate the Bloomingdale
and LeDroit Park neighborhoods of Northwest Washington in response to a spate
of flash floods last summer.
The
work, estimated to cost as much as $40 million more than previous flood-relief
plans, would involve converting facilities on the former McMillan sand
filtration site into storage tanks capable of holding 3 million gallons of
runoff each. Meanwhile, D.C. Water crews would immediately begin digging a
six-block-long, Metro-size tunnel under First Street, which could store 6
million gallons of stormwater and sewage.
The
McMillan storage tanks could be finished as soon as spring 2014, said George S.
Hawkins, D.C. Water`s general manager, and the First Street tunnel could be
completed two years later. Engineers estimate the projects could reduce flooding
depths by 20 inches.
Under
previous time lines, the affected neighborhoods would not have seen significant
relief until 2025.
[Allew Lew quote here....]
[Stuff that Bloomingdale residents already know in these removed paragraphs.]
Storing
runoff at the McMillan site, where much of the city`s drinking water was
filtered and treated until 1985, is expected to relieve pressure on the First
Street line during intense rains. The tunnel will provide additional relief —
enough that the water from last summer`s most severe storm would have barely
lapped the top of street curbs. But a full solution is not expected until the
completion of a 23-foot-wide, east-west trunk sewer that would drain the First
Street bore.
The
proposal, in part, represents an acceleration of existing plans to build relief
sewers, previously expected to be completed in 2025. Rather than wait to build
the First Street tunnel, D.C. Water wants to start tunneling immediately, using
the 19-foot bore to store runoff while the trunk line is built from the east.
Under
the new plan, the entire project would be completed by 2022, three years
earlier than previously contemplated.
[Two removed paragraphs about money.]
Complicating
the relief plans is an effort to redevelop the McMillan site into a new
neighborhood of residences, shops and offices. Recently, Gray issued an
economic development plan that proposed a medical hub for the site, tying into
the three hospitals immediately to the north.
Officials
believe that the flood relief plan will not significantly alter the development
plans. One filtration cell on the site`s northeast corner would capture flow
from a storm sewer running down North Capitol Street; on the site`s western
edge, another cell will be used to capture flow headed straight down First
Street. Three acres at the southwest corner would be used for the tunnel-boring
operation.
[paragraph removed.]
Representatives
of the development team tasked with preparing the site were skeptical of the
flood relief plan when it was initially floated in September, citing the fact
that the 27-acre McMillan site is a protected historic landmark. But city
officials believe converting the old filtration tanks to hold stormwater is
compatible with its historic use.
[some noncritical paragraphs removed.]
[These three paragraphs are on backflow preventers.]
[Teri Janine Quinn is quoted in the last two paragraphs.]
No comments:
Post a Comment