Elements 2010

Irrigation Technology's Growing Pains

Housing boom gone bust has left a wake of water system failures, new reforms.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo: Rain Bird Corp.

Additional Article Content

By David Engle

1 Comments

Money was easy to borrow, and, at the same time, droughts were front-page stories. For two decades–plus, millions of single-family, cluster, and town homes were being put up, with nice lawns to maintain. Along the way, irrigation systems became a must-have option. Like electric garage door openers, everyone had to have automatic sprinklers with the new home, as standard.

To feed the demand, new “smart” data-encoded irrigation control products issued forth, evolved quickly, and were added onto developers’ plans.

And during this time, few, if any, codes and standards were issued by regulatory bodies; nothing adequate to assure quality or standardization in rapidly growing practices of landscape irrigation design, installation, operation, or technology.

The result?

From his vantage in the field—encountering landscape systems almost daily—Timothy Malooly, an EPA WaterSense Partner and president of Irrigation Consultants & Control Inc. (Plymouth, MN), observes that, “Thousands of irrigation systems that have been installed in the last 10 years … are performing very poorly.”

Problems are perhaps most evident among newer home projects, he finds. Here, housing developers, “not surprisingly, count on vendor-installers to practice proper designs and installation techniques,” he says.

Unfortunately, irrigation businesses have not always met these expectations. Meanwhile, as irrigation technologies were proliferating and rapidly evolving, the pace of growth made it difficult for some practitioners—many newly arriving with the boom—to keep up.

“Little or no licensure of installers” existed, nor training of end-users “on proper irrigation scheduling or maintenance practice,” observes Malooly.

Malooly serves on the boards of the Irrigation Association (IA) and the Minnesota Nursery and Landscape Association, and chairs IA’s national Ambassador program to promote best practices. He adds that disappointing outcomes were almost inevitable.

Advertisement

Irrigation deficiencies may not appear right away or, when they do, manifest themselves ambiguously, with excessively wet or inexplicably dry areas. Perhaps belatedly, after the developers have sold the homes and an owners’ association has taken over the property, the magnitude of problems becomes apparent.

Complicating matters is the likelihood that residential system owners’ “lack of knowledge or proper instruction in the first place generally leads to misuse,” such as over-watering to compensate, or to seeking help from “service vendors unprepared or uninterested in addressing root causes,” says Malooly. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

TomRinAZ

June 3rd, 2009 11:42 AM PT

There are equal parts, some fine and some irrational, claims and intentions hidden throughout this article. Professional irrigation designers who would generally be happy to provide designs that would carry system performance specifications (under professional liability exposure), and professional water managers who would be happy to earn more for high performance (measured and verified water use efficiency), not to mention professional agronomists that are cost-effective arbitors for other critical limiting factors...in my opinion, these service providers have been undermined by "higher consultants", quasi-expert,not financially liable-municipal conservationists, and other market-channel members. It is sad that calls for by some for plant-soil-water engineering and integrated plant ecology have been trumpted by developers own priorities, lax municipal codes and other market-channel interests that really just want to "get'er done, n'go do anuther"..denying the complex nature of plant and root zone environments. Any much more thinking about it at all as over-thinking. Like, doesn't ET-controller error (program settings and sensors)accumulate, especially for non-turf elements? Doesn't the ET-model require periodic "ground-truthing?" That said, champions of "engineered green" must do better making their case, providing the economic justifications, and always including robust measurement and verification accounting systems for valid and reliable, higher-certainty landscape (and farm) life-cycle (crop-cycle)management.

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*