nutbutter
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 1, 2005
- 100
Hello,
I have fairly little experience in hydrologic modeling and design of detention basins. I need some advice as to whether my design sounds reasonable or not.
I'm sizing a detention basin with a total watershed area of 54 acres almost entirely undeveloped. My project is developing 14 acres of that watershed area, so ultimately it will be about 14 developed and 40 acres undeveloped.
I was told by a more experienced engineer that a good rule of thumb for basin volume (storage) is 10,000 ft^3 per developed acre. So with that figure in mind, my basin should be sized about 140,000 ft^3.
After routing my 100-year, 24-hour TR-55 hydrographs (P = 7.7 in) through the basin the total storage required is 181,000 ft^3. That seems fairly reasonable, however, the pond seems to be very large to me after drawing it out and adding 2 ft of freeboard. At the top of my basin, the area is about 1.15 acres. Does that seem too large? I have no frame of reference because I've never designed a detention basin before. For that reason, I was extremely conservative in my hydrologic modeling with TR-55.
I just got my PE and this'll be the first project that I'm sealing so I won't mind being a little conservative. The basin is 9.4' from invert to top of basin (2 ft of freeboard) and 1.15 acres at top of basin. Does the size seem reasonable to you? Way too big? Is 10,000 ft^3 per developed acre a good estimate? Also, is TR-55 inherently very conservative? I was told that it was, however, I used conservative numbers anyway.
Any help would be much appreciated.
Peace,
Steve
I have fairly little experience in hydrologic modeling and design of detention basins. I need some advice as to whether my design sounds reasonable or not.
I'm sizing a detention basin with a total watershed area of 54 acres almost entirely undeveloped. My project is developing 14 acres of that watershed area, so ultimately it will be about 14 developed and 40 acres undeveloped.
I was told by a more experienced engineer that a good rule of thumb for basin volume (storage) is 10,000 ft^3 per developed acre. So with that figure in mind, my basin should be sized about 140,000 ft^3.
After routing my 100-year, 24-hour TR-55 hydrographs (P = 7.7 in) through the basin the total storage required is 181,000 ft^3. That seems fairly reasonable, however, the pond seems to be very large to me after drawing it out and adding 2 ft of freeboard. At the top of my basin, the area is about 1.15 acres. Does that seem too large? I have no frame of reference because I've never designed a detention basin before. For that reason, I was extremely conservative in my hydrologic modeling with TR-55.
I just got my PE and this'll be the first project that I'm sealing so I won't mind being a little conservative. The basin is 9.4' from invert to top of basin (2 ft of freeboard) and 1.15 acres at top of basin. Does the size seem reasonable to you? Way too big? Is 10,000 ft^3 per developed acre a good estimate? Also, is TR-55 inherently very conservative? I was told that it was, however, I used conservative numbers anyway.
Any help would be much appreciated.
Peace,
Steve