The Water Efficiency Blogs

The Blogger

Elizabeth Cutright Water Efficiency Editor

More from this blogger

  1. Reuse Wrap Up
  2. Household Water Use
  3. What's Your Waterprint
  4. Lawsuits, Pipelines, and One Tiny Fish
  5. One Million Acre-Feet
  6. Rainwater Ordinance
  7. Gauging Risks
  8. WaterSense for New Homes
  9. Tri-State Co-Op
  10. Nuclear Desalination
  11. What does a worst-case scenario look like
  12. All Bark and No Bite
  13. Subsidized Water
  14. Keeping It Local
  15. Private or Public
  16. What's Your Standard
  17. WE Professionals Take a Bow
  18. Pipe Bursts, News at 11
  19. Drought, Demand, and the GW Bogeyman
  20. Smart Water Use
  21. Delta Update
  22. Alternative Sources
  23. Water Saved Is Water Earned
  24. Mile-High Metering
  25. Smart Water Grid
  26. Seeing Into the Future
  27. Can Two Rights Make a Wrong
  28. Thinking Big, Going Small
  29. The Dead Zone
  30. Pipe Dreams
  31. Interdependency
  32. Low-Tech Leak Detection
  33. Money-Management Musical Chairs
  34. A First for Rainwater Harvesting
  35. Purpose and Intent
  36. Drought Dangers
  37. All Eyes on the West
  38. Climate Chaos
  39. Preemptive Strike
  40. A Place With No Meters
  41. Water Buffaloes in the Delta
  42. Wildfires and Water Conservation
  43. National Drinking Water Week
  44. Finally Teamwork
  45. Tainted Water
  46. Hit them in the pocketbook!
  47. The Place to Be
  48. Where the WE's Are
  49. Let's Be Friends
  50. Free Market Water
  51. Role Model
  52. Budget Basics
  53. Breaking It All Down
  54. Unsung Heroes
  55. It's Raining, It's Pouring..
  56. Meter Management
  57. Finding Funding
  58. Turning Lemons Into Lemonade
  59. New Rules for a New Year
  60. Is it a water grab or a reasonable solution
  61. Drops and Crops
  62. Dear Santa..
  63. Not Just Storm Clouds on the Horizon
  64. Wondering After a Winter Break
  65. Virtual Water
  66. Water and Compromise
  67. Reuse Revisited
  68. Turf Revisited
  69. Taking it to the Next Level
  70. The Nine Steps
  71. Water Lemons
  72. To Turf or Not to Turf
  73. News You May Have Missed
  74. The Wall Street Ripple Effect
  75. Let it Rain!
  76. Another Perspective
  77. De-Centralizing
  78. Personal Responsibility Versus Government Action
  79. Field Trippin' in the Garden
  80. Grand Theft Water
  81. Drowning Dragon
  82. Money Changes Everything
  83. Sharks! Tomatoes! Astroturf!
  84. Titans of Industry - Should Big Business Control The Tap
  85. Welcome to the New Site!
view all

WE Editor's Blog

January 18th, 2010 1:20pm PST

Batten Down the Hatches!

Posted By Elizabeth Cutright 1 Comment

Here in California, we’re bracing for a fortnight of winter storms that, while arriving late in the season, promise to inundate the state with several inches of rain over the next several days. As I watch trees bent and lashed by the wet weather, I think it’s perhaps the perfect time to look back on some of the rainwater harvesting articles we’ve covered in the magazine.

In “Acing the ‘Greening’ Curve” by Sue Marquette Poremba, we highlighted Duke University’s Pratt College of Engineering that, along with help from The Home Depot, designed a “smart home,” that includes two 1,000-gallon rainwater collection systems from BRAE rainwater systems irrigate the property and provide water for toilets and the clothes washing machine, as well as landscape irrigation.

If you take a look at the University of Georgia’s water conservation program (“Water Task Force”), you can read all about how the university worked hard to save over 84 million gallons of water during a five-year period.  Instrumental to that program was the utilization of rain gardens, and the modification of two existing campus buildings to include cisterns capable of capturing rainwater and air-conditioning condensation for reuse.

And finally, in Margaret Buranen’s article, “Raincatcher's Delight”, we took a long look at Austin’s Seaholm project, which includes an extensive rainwater harvesting system.

So what do you think? Does rainwater harvesting get enough attention? And should cities take up the call, or should we fall back on the old mantra of individual responsibility?

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

rashby

January 20th, 2010 9:58 AM PT

I think cities need to take action. This issue is too important to wait for individuals to make changes. The longer we wait for people to take interest, the deeper Californians will get in this water crisis.

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*