Title: Vegetated Filters
1Vegetated Filters
Dave Briglio, P.E. MACTEC Mike Novotney Center
for Watershed Protection
2- An overview of the major components of the
enhanced swale and filter strip - sizing and design processes
3Enhanced Swales
4Description Vegetated open channels that are
explicitly designed and constructed to capture
and treat stormwater runoff within dry or wet
cells formed by check dams or other means.
52 Design Options
- Wet Swale
- Linear wetland marsh
- Filtration and biological removal
- Non-intense non-residential applications
- Dry Swale
- Linear sand filter
- Filter bed over underdrain
- Filtration
- Residential applications
6Key Physical Considerations
- 5 acre maximum
- Space needed is 10-20 of impervious area
draining to site - 2-yr storm non-erosive, 25-year storm within
channel floodplain easement - 2 8 bottom width, flat side slopes (41
preferable) - Dry 24-48 hour drawdown, 30 soil with PVC
underdrain, gt2 to water table , 3-5 feet of head
dry, lt 4 channel slope, drops if gt 1-2, 3-6
grass - Wet 18 maximum ponding, 12 avg., V-weirs,
positive flow
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9Major ComponentsDry Swale
- Inlet and sediment forebay
- 0.1 per imp. acre storage required
- 6 drop to pea gravel diaphragm
- Soil media
- 30 thick, k1-1.5 ft/day
- 2-8 bottom width min.
- Underdrain
- PVC, 6 gravel around it
- Check dams
- Reduce velocity, increase contact time
- Energy dissipation below them
- Side slope
- 21 max (41 preferred)
10Dry Swale
11Dry Swale
12Profile of Dry Swale
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14Major ComponentsWet Swale
- Inlet and sediment forebay
- 0.1 per imp. Acre storage required
- 6 drop to pea gravel diaphragm
- Wetlands plantings
- 2-8 bottom width min.
- Emergent plantings
- Water
- Standing water or poorly drained soils
- 18 ponding max.
- Check dams
- Reduce velocity, increase contact time
- V notch
- Side slope
- 21 max (41 preferred)
15Wet Swale
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17Wet Swale
18Design StepsLike Flow-Thru Infiltration Trench
- Compute WQv and if applicable Cpv
- Screen site
- Screen local criteria
- Size sedimentation chamber
- Size channel dimensions (WQ peak flow)
- Design check dams
- Calculated drawdown
- Check 2-yr and 25-yr storms
- Design orifices
- Design inlets, underdrain
- Prepare vegetation plan
19See design example in Appendix D5 for more
information
20Engineered Filter Strips
21Filter strips are uniformly graded and densely
vegetated sections of land, engineered and
designed to treat runoff from and remove
pollutants through vegetative filtering and
infiltration.
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25Stream Buffer Filter Strip
26Basic Design Considerations
- Plain Filter Strip
- 5 min contact time minimum
- 1-2 flow depth maximum
- 2-6 slope so no pooling or concentration of
flows - Flow spreader at top
- Dense grass stand
- Filter Strip With Berm
- WQv behind berm can consider spreader
- 24-hour drawdown
- Grass withstand inundation
- Try to mimic Plain Filter Strip for other
requirements to gain filtering removal as well
27Basic Design Considerations
- Pollution Removal
- filtering, infiltration settling (for berm
option) - Calculations
- Balancing width and length of filter to fit site
and local criteria - Width takes discharge and spreads it out to
maintain sheet flow depth - Length maintains adequate contact time to allow
for removal
- Filter Width
- Calculate unit loading (q) to maintain specified
depth at given roughness and slope - Calculate WQ discharge (Q)
- Filter width is Q/q
- Filter Length
- From kinematic wave solution of sheet flow in
TR55 solved for length - Considered more accurate than simple Manning
shorter lengths too
28Design Steps
- Determine local criteria and site characteristics
- Calculate allowable loading from Manning
- Calculate Qwq
- Calculate WfMIN
- Calculate length of strip
- Fit filter strips to site and make adjustments
- Design flow spreader approach
- If berm calculate WQv and determine size of
wedge of storage - Complete design details
29Pretreatment Filter Design
30- An example of enhanced swale design
- Taken from Appendix D5
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32Calculated Volumes.
33Step 1. Determine if the site conditions are
appropriateGround elevation is at 72High
water table is 83OK Step 2. Determine
Pretreatment volume 0.1 per impervious
acre1.9 ac x (0.1) x (1ft/12) x (43,560 sq.
ft/ac) 689.7 cfWell have 2 shallow forebays,
each with 345 cf
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35Step 3. Determine swale dimensionsMaximum
ponding depth 18 inches1,400 feet of swale
availableMinimum slope 1...OK Trapezoidal
section 6-ft wide, 31, 9 ave. depth 6.2
sfx 1400 lf 8600 cf gt WQv (8102 cf)OK
36Step 4. Compute the number of check damsMax.
depth 18 (1.5), _at_ 1 150 LF of
swaleNorthwest fork 500 LF4
requiredNortheast fork 900 LF6 required
Step 5. Compute soil percolation rate
(k)Drawdown time 24 hrs, max. depth
1.5Planting soil selected with k
1.5/dayMay require gravel/perforated pipe
underdrain system
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38Step 6. Check height of control structureNeed
to carry the 25-year flow 19 cfsSeparate
analyses shows that depth of flow 0.65 feet for
19 cfsDepth of ponding 1.5 feetFreeboard
0.5 feetTotal height 1.5 0.65 0.5 2.7
feet high
39Step 7. Calculate 25-yr weir lengthNeed to
carry the 25-year flow 19 cfsDepth of flow
0.65 feetWeir equation Q CLH 3/2C 3.1, Q
19, H 0.65L 19/(3.10.65 1.5) 11.7
feet, use 12 feet
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41Coastal Challenges
42Coastal Challenges
43Coastal Challenges
44Coastal Challenges
45Coastal Challenges
See Handouts for LID Practices
46Coastal Challenges
See Handouts for LID Practices
47Coastal Challenges
See Handouts for LID Practices
48Coastal Challenges
See Handouts for LID Practices
49Coastal Challenges
See Handouts for LID Practices
50CSS Design Credits
- 7.4 Better Site Planning Techniques
- 7.5 Better Site Design Techniques
- 7.6 LID Practice
- 8.4 General Application BMPs
51CSS Design Credits