July-August 2007

Master-Planned

An awesome design, a state-of-the art central computer, and lots of synergy make the irrigation system at Ladera Ranch the unseen gem of this award-winning community.

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By Mark Saunders

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“From a utility point of view, having it all centralized makes for a more efficient operation,” explains Ferons. “We don’t have go around and lock off all the meters and do all that. Instead, we can work with [Water Concern] and they can shut it down and schedule their irrigation before and after any repair work that we have to do on the local operation reservoirs or the pump stations or anything like that.”

According to Lott Steffey of Mosaic Consultants (the horticultural firm that oversees the irrigation and landscaping of Ladera Ranch), “It’s not just about water savings; it’s about watering correctly. Too many people get focused on their savings, which can be to the detriment of the plants and slopes. It’s all about using the central system to irrigate effectively and efficiently and correctly to what the plants need. … You don’t want to overwater, but you don’t want to underwater either.”

The Case of the Missing Water
One of the most innovative uses of the central computer system—and one that it probably wasn’t designed for—is the ability to track down a closed valve, like the one restricting water flow in a certain sector of Ladera Ranch.

Both Coward and Hohl are at a loss to explain the low-pressure readings and dying vegetation. “We’d turn the system on during the day, and it didn’t seem too bad,” says Hohl. “But at night, when all the other controllers were coming on at the same time and pulling a lot of water, the pressure dropped so much that our [sprinkler] heads weren’t even popping up.”

Through the low-flow alarms generated daily by the central system, Coward and Hohl determined that there had to be a valve shut off on a particular street. “That’s something that, if you didn’t have the flow sensing and the ability to tie all your satellites together, could go unnoticed for a long time,” says Coward.

Thanks to the central’s flow reports and detail GIS maps, Water Concern was able to backtrack and determine it had to be one valve on a certain street. “The water district kept telling us, ‘The valves are all open; they’re all open.’ But when we went out to the street, opened up the valve lid, and started to turn the handle, sure enough, you could hear water start flowing through the line.”

The next day all the low-flow alarms were gone.

Having a smart central system is only half the battle. Staying in constant contact with contractors and walking the property daily is a necessary part of staying on top of the job, as well as detecting problems before they become apparent. As Steffey puts it, “You can manage an irrigation system, or Ladera Ranch for that matter, from China through the computer. But it’s another thing to be out there every day looking at things and working with the contractor.”

Walking the Talk
Southern Orange County, specifically the Mission Viejo area, has been in a constant state of growth for the past 30 years. During this time, chaparral and tree-lined riparian canyons have been turned into master-planned bedroom communities. For example, the Santa Margarita Water District had 13,000 connections in 1983; today, it has more than 55,000 (a net gain of over 125, 000 customers). That development footprint has had a huge impact on the land as well as utilities that have risen to meet the demand for gas, electricity, and water. Ladera Ranch is currently about 500 homes away from a final 8,100-home build-out, so the need for domestic water is high: an average of 1.6 million gallons per day. Likewise, the 2 million to 5.5 million gallons of recycled water that Ladera uses on average every day require a sophisticated system of on-the-spot checks and balances—not just a wiz-bang central computer.

Photo: Water Concern
The system allows for fine-tuning to meet the Ladera Ranch Project's irrigation needs.

This need for daily inspection of the system and the grounds is why Water Concern has Coward stationed onsite at Ladera Ranch. O’Connell Landscape Project Manager, Eric Schaff (along with the 130 employees who work for him) works hand-in-hand with Coward, be it walking the grounds, interacting with employees and contractors, or using the central system to determine the location of a potential problem. Both companies benefit from the synergy of working so closely together.

According to Schaff, regular communication is the key to why Ladera Ranch’s landscaping looks the way it does. “It’s all been about communication on this job. You need someone of Water Concern’s status because this is a very complex system. It’s been a great experience working with them, partly because Todd Coward is such a hands-on guy—he’s not just good in the office. Contractors who are office people, when you get them out working with the guys who maintain things in the field, it’s different. Todd is certainly the right guy to have out here.”

The Results Speak for Themselves
Feron’s experience of working with multiple planned communities in the Santa Margarita Water District’s service area gives him a unique perspective to evaluate the effectiveness of Ladera Ranch’s total systems approach to maintaining the property.

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“If you don’t dedicate the staff like [Water Concern] has to operate the system and keep up with it, then you lose the ability to take advantage of it,” says Feron.

Feron’s believes inconsistency often stands in the way of success. “Other areas have similar systems,” he says, “[but] some of them have changed their landscape company several times, so the continuity is lost and the current guys don’t really know how to operate the system entirely—or all the functionality of it. So what they tend to do is override it and operate it like an old time clock. Next Page >

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