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Rain Gardens at Vassar College: A Water Quality Assessment Emily Vail Collins Research Fellow Vassar College Environmental Research Institute Community Educator Environment Program Cornell Cooperative Extension Dutchess County

NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

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Page 1: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Rain Gardens at Vassar College: A Water Quality Assessment

Emily VailCollins Research Fellow

Vassar College Environmental Research Institute

Community EducatorEnvironment Program

Cornell Cooperative Extension Dutchess County

Page 2: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

National Research Council, “Stormwater Management in the United States” (2008)

Stormwater and Water Quantity

Page 3: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Stormwater and Water Quality

• Sediment - erosion, bound to other pollutants

• Nutrients - eutrophication

• Heavy metals - toxicity

• Other contaminants

- Ecological problems in streams (Walsh et al. 2005, Paul & Meyer 2001, Groffman

et al. 2003, National Research Council 2008)

- Water treatment is expensive

Page 4: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Rain gardens?

NYS DEC, “New York State Stormwater Design Manual” (2008)

Page 5: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Town House Apartments Site

Page 6: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Redevelopment - 2008

Rain Garden 2

Rain Garden 1

Page 7: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Rain Garden 2 Rain Garden 1

Page 8: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Water samples collected:

• Precipitation

• Stormwater runoff

• Soil water

• Catch basins

Analyzed for:

• Total suspended solids (TSS)

• Dissolved inorganic nutrients (N, P)

• Heavy metals (Cu, Pb, Zn)

Page 9: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Site Map

Page 10: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Rain Garden Catch Basin Unfiltered Catch Basin

Page 11: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

n = 6, samples from December 2008, March 2009, April 2009, August 2010, and October 2010

Mean TSS in Catch Basins

0

5

10

15

20

25

Rain Garden 2 Rain Garden 1 Unfiltered Catch Basin

Con

cen

tra

tio

n (

mg

/L)

Page 12: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

n = 6, samples from December 2008, March 2009, April 2009, August 2010, and October 2010

Mean Dissolved Nutrient Concentrations in Catch Basins

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

Rain Garden 2 Rain Garden 1 Unfiltered Catch Basin

Co

ncen

trati

on

(m

g/

L)

Ammonium

Nitrate

Phosphate

Page 13: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

n = 6, samples from December 2008, March 2009, April 2009, August 2010, and October 2010

Mean Total Heavy Metal Concentrations in Catch Basins

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

Rain Garden 2 Rain Garden 1 Unfiltered Catch Basin

Con

cen

tra

tio

n (

mg

/L)

Copper

Lead

Zinc

Page 14: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Rain Garden 2 inlet Rain Garden 1 inlet

Page 15: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Mean Total Heavy Metal Concentrations in Catch Basins

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

Rain Garden 2 Rain Garden 1 Unfiltered Catch Basin

Con

cen

tra

tio

n (

mg

/L)

Copper

Lead

Zinc

n = 6, samples from December 2008, March 2009, April 2009, August 2010, and October 2010

Page 16: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Summary

• Rain gardens are effective at removing TSS– Consistent with other studies (Davis 2007, Davis 2009,

Bratieres et al. 2008)

• May be net exporters of nutrients (affected by the growing season)– Some studies found that although total N and P

reduced, inorganic nutrients increased (Davis et al. 2009, Davis et al. 2006, US EPA 1999, Davis et al. 2007, Dietz & Clausen 2006, Kim et al. 2003)

Page 17: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Summary

• Do not appear to moderate heavy metal loads (further studies needed)

– Laboratory studies show 88-97% removal of Cd, Cu,

Pb, Zn from synthetic stormwater (Sun & Davis 2006,

Davis et al. 2001, Davis et al. 2003)

– Field studies - slightly lower removal rates for metals (Davis 2007)

• Increased retention time for stormwater quantity (Davis et al. 2009, Davis 2007, Hood et al. 2007, Hatt et al. 2009)

Page 18: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Conclusion• Rain gardens - an important aspect of Low Impact Design

• Maintain pre-development hydrology

• Local BMPs to address ecosystem-wide problems

• Need for assessment

• Aesthetics and function

Page 19: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Next steps

• Do rain gardens continue to function the same way over the duration of a storm event?– Monitoring water quality

– Assess flow patterns on site

• What kind of maintenance is required? Is the design functioning as it was intended?– Visual observations and considerations for

maintenance and potential design modifications

Page 20: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Monitoring water quality for the duration of a storm event

Page 21: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

TSS in Rain Garden 1 Catch Basin on 10/14

y = -0.2302x + 7.2547

R2 = 0.4652

0.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

17:3

1

17:4

6

18:0

1

18:1

6

18:3

1

18:4

6

19:0

1

19:1

6

19:3

1

19:4

6

20:0

1

20:1

6

20:3

1

20:4

6

21:0

1

21:1

6

21:3

1

21:4

6

22:0

1

22:1

6

22:3

1

22:4

6

23:0

1

23:1

6

Time

Con

cen

trati

on

(m

g/L)

TSS in Rain Garden 1 Catch Basin and

Unfiltered Catch Basin on 10/14

0.00

5.00

10.00

15.00

20.00

25.00

30.00

17:3

1

17:4

6

18:0

1

18:1

6

18:3

1

18:4

6

19:0

1

19:1

6

19:3

1

19:4

6

20:0

1

20:1

6

20:3

1

20:4

6

21:0

1

21:1

6

21:3

1

21:4

6

22:0

1

22:1

6

22:3

1

22:4

6

23:0

1

23:1

6

Time

Co

nce

ntr

ati

on

(m

g/

L) Rain Garden 1

Unfiltered Catch Basin

Page 22: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Total Heavy Metal Concentration and Water Depth in

Rain Garden 1 Catch Basin, 10/14

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

17:3

1

17:4

6

18:0

1

18:1

6

18:3

1

18:4

6

19:0

1

19:1

6

19:3

1

19:4

6

20:0

1

20:1

6

20:3

1

20:4

6

21:0

1

21:1

6

21:3

1

21:4

6

22:0

1

22:1

6

22:3

1

22:4

6

23:0

1

23:1

6

Time

Hea

vy M

eta

l

Con

ce

ntra

tio

n

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0.45

Wa

ter

De

pth (

m)

Total heavy metals

Water depth

Page 23: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Water Depth in Rain Garden 1 Catch Basin and

Unfiltered Catch Basin and Precipitation on 10/14

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

17:0

0

17:1

5

17:3

0

17:4

5

18:0

0

18:1

5

18:3

0

18:4

5

19:0

0

19:1

5

19:3

0

19:4

5

20:0

0

20:1

5

20:3

0

20:4

5

21:0

0

21:1

5

21:3

0

21:4

5

22:0

0

22:1

5

22:3

0

22:4

5

23:0

0

23:1

5

23:3

0

23:4

5

0:00

Time

Wa

te

r D

epth

(m

)

0

0.0005

0.001

0.0015

Pre

cip

itatio

n (

m)

Unfiltered Catch Basin

Rain Garden 1

Precipitation

Page 24: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Assessing Flow Patterns

Page 25: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Identifying maintenance concerns

• Visual observation and data collection

• Sediment build-up in inlets

• Water flow through soil

• Plant growth

• Establishment of weeds

Page 26: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Acknowledgements

Dr. Lynn Christenson, Dr. Mary Ann Cunningham, Dr. Stuart Belli, Dr. Kirsten Menking, Dr. David Gillikin, Dr. Jill Schneiderman, Dr. Mark Schlessman, Rick Jones, Keri VanCamp, Seth Stickle, Danielle Goldie, Cat Foley,

Sandy Alles, & Will Jobs

Vassar College Environmental Research Institute

Vassar College Environmental Studies Program

Page 27: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden
Page 28: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Mean Nutrient Concentrations

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Precipitation Runoff Soil Water Rain Garden CatchBasins

Unfiltered CatchBasin

Co

nce

ntr

ati

on

(m

g/

L)

Ammonium

Nitrate

Phosphate

Page 29: NY: Vassar College NY: Rain Garden

Mean Heavy Metal Concentrations

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

Precipitation Runoff Soil Water Rain Garden Catch

Basins

Unfiltered Catch

Basin

Co

ncen

trati

on

(m

g/

L)

Copper

Lead

Zinc