TheEnginerd
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 19, 2012
- 34
Hello All:
My company has to review a site plan for a small 10 unit towhhome development. So I’m reviewing the plan and almost everything on the job is tight, but meets the ordinance requirements. The only real concern I have is with respect to stormwater.
The site is about an acre. The existing lot is completely vacant and pervious. The new project proposes 8/10ths of an acre of impervious surfaces. The applicant’s engineer proposes (2) – 10 foot wide swales totaling 2300 Cubic Feet to as he claims, fully detain the 100 year storm. There is no outlet from these swales, they use infiltration only.
The engineer used the MODIFIED RATIONAL method to do his basin sizing calculations. I do not have a lot of experience with this method. I was always taught to use the NRCS TR-55 methodology (by hand) or TR-20 using software (hydrocad, hydraflow, etc.)
In NJ where I work, the NRCS 100 year design storm is 8.9 inches for the 24 hour event. Over 8/10ths of an acre, that comes out to roughly 20,000 cubic feet of water. That’s about 9 times more than this engineer calculated.
Basically all of the engineer’s calculations are one 2 or 3 sheets of paper and look like they were done in about an hour. For many reasons I can’t believe that this methodology is acceptable not just for this project but for any project where it will be used to size a detention basin.
The problem that I have is that nowhere in the municipal ordinance does it prohibit the use of the modified rational method.
So what can I do here? I have a real concern that not only will these tiny swales not contain a large storm event, but according to the NRCS methodology the swales would not even contain a normal 1 year storm event. The flow would then overtop and head directly into the neighboring houses. Everywhere I look I read that the mod. Rational method underestimates stormwater volumes, but I can’t find anything that definitively says that it’s incorrect or irresponsible of an engineer to use only this method.
I would appreciate and be grateful for your thoughts on this.
My company has to review a site plan for a small 10 unit towhhome development. So I’m reviewing the plan and almost everything on the job is tight, but meets the ordinance requirements. The only real concern I have is with respect to stormwater.
The site is about an acre. The existing lot is completely vacant and pervious. The new project proposes 8/10ths of an acre of impervious surfaces. The applicant’s engineer proposes (2) – 10 foot wide swales totaling 2300 Cubic Feet to as he claims, fully detain the 100 year storm. There is no outlet from these swales, they use infiltration only.
The engineer used the MODIFIED RATIONAL method to do his basin sizing calculations. I do not have a lot of experience with this method. I was always taught to use the NRCS TR-55 methodology (by hand) or TR-20 using software (hydrocad, hydraflow, etc.)
In NJ where I work, the NRCS 100 year design storm is 8.9 inches for the 24 hour event. Over 8/10ths of an acre, that comes out to roughly 20,000 cubic feet of water. That’s about 9 times more than this engineer calculated.
Basically all of the engineer’s calculations are one 2 or 3 sheets of paper and look like they were done in about an hour. For many reasons I can’t believe that this methodology is acceptable not just for this project but for any project where it will be used to size a detention basin.
The problem that I have is that nowhere in the municipal ordinance does it prohibit the use of the modified rational method.
So what can I do here? I have a real concern that not only will these tiny swales not contain a large storm event, but according to the NRCS methodology the swales would not even contain a normal 1 year storm event. The flow would then overtop and head directly into the neighboring houses. Everywhere I look I read that the mod. Rational method underestimates stormwater volumes, but I can’t find anything that definitively says that it’s incorrect or irresponsible of an engineer to use only this method.
I would appreciate and be grateful for your thoughts on this.