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Civil/Environmental
- May 26, 2007
- 3
Hello all and thanks in advance for any guidance you provide.
I'm reviewing a site plan amendment for an industrial site. The site has an existing private drainage system outfalling to a public inlet via a 10-inch PVC pipe. The amendment will add buildings and therefore increases the runoff rate. To accommodate the increased runoff, the designer is proposing a system with a max 16-inch pipe, and, in an apparent effort to save some dollars, the designer is proposing to not upsize the entire run of 10-inch pipe to the inlet. Rather, the system would entail conveying runoff from the new 16-inch pipe to the existing 10-inch pipe. This would save the project from upsizing about 400 feet of existing 10-inch pipe under a parking lot. Applicable design criteria specifically state jurisdiction includes privately owned and maintained systems and specifically disallows decreased pipe size in the downstream direction. However, we have a variance process...which leads to my question: If we allow the variance, can we expect any adverse effects to the public system.
By the way, I realize there is no hydraulic rationale for a 16-inch pipe conveying to a 10-inch pipe. I understand the designer is specifying a larger pipe to convey runoff from the surface and temporarily store the water due to temporary backwater effects from the smaller downstream pipe. Frankly, I think this issmart creative, I just don't want the public system to suffer from some unrecognized effects.
I'm reviewing a site plan amendment for an industrial site. The site has an existing private drainage system outfalling to a public inlet via a 10-inch PVC pipe. The amendment will add buildings and therefore increases the runoff rate. To accommodate the increased runoff, the designer is proposing a system with a max 16-inch pipe, and, in an apparent effort to save some dollars, the designer is proposing to not upsize the entire run of 10-inch pipe to the inlet. Rather, the system would entail conveying runoff from the new 16-inch pipe to the existing 10-inch pipe. This would save the project from upsizing about 400 feet of existing 10-inch pipe under a parking lot. Applicable design criteria specifically state jurisdiction includes privately owned and maintained systems and specifically disallows decreased pipe size in the downstream direction. However, we have a variance process...which leads to my question: If we allow the variance, can we expect any adverse effects to the public system.
By the way, I realize there is no hydraulic rationale for a 16-inch pipe conveying to a 10-inch pipe. I understand the designer is specifying a larger pipe to convey runoff from the surface and temporarily store the water due to temporary backwater effects from the smaller downstream pipe. Frankly, I think this is