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.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Additional Article Content

By Mark Saunders

Comments


“The difference we see between Ladera and some of these other areas,” he continues, “is that they have really taken ownership of it and really wanted to operate it and continue to operate it. … We’re going back in and trying to help some of the other guys retrain themselves on how to operate their system because it’s in our best interest too for them to be able to operate smart and minimize their use of water.”

Todd Beebe, executive director of the Ladera Ranch Maintenance Corporation (LARMAC), which oversees the entire community, believes teamwork is at the center of maintaining Ladera’s aesthetic appeal.

“I keep likening it back to family, but that’s what it is essentially,” says Beebe. “We are trusted with a process and a whole presentation, so we have to work together in that respect. And they are doing a fantastic job. If it was just me managing O’Connell and Water Concern, without Mosaic involved, there might be some disconnect. But it works because Water Concern, Mosaic, and O’Connell all work together for the common good.”

Whether the different factions that spend half their waking hours beautifying Ladera Ranch could be considered a family is up for debate; however, as with any close-knit group of workers pulling together on a long-term project, there are bound to be some bumps in the road—especially when the introduction of new technology radically redefines job descriptions and creates a different protocol for doing the same job that most of the workers had been doing for the past decade.

“In the beginning, there was the language barrier, and it took a while for the guys to figure out how a central control worked and how things change when you’re working with ET and matching precipitation rates with heads,” remembers Schaff. “It was a whole new experience for our guys and a big adjustment.

Photo: Water Concern
The Ladera Ranch Project includes 750 acres of common area and landscaping.

“There was some bickering, like brother and sister stuff, and a lot of finger pointing, and it took time for the relationship to grow. There was a lot more to it than just irrigation. You had two cultures clashing. When you do something a certain way for 10 to 15 years, there’s a big learning curve involved in learning how to do that same thing differently. And a system is only as good as the people who work with it.

“For example,” he continues, “on a typical job, irrigators will fix a sprinkler with whatever head they happen to have on the truck and you might not notice it. Here, you do that and it could set off an alarm for high or low flows because all the flows have been established beforehand by Water Concern so they get everything done in our watering window every night—and it really works well.

“Now that our Lead Irrigator Homero Pedraza understands the system and how it works together with the weather satellite, he is completely on board and can relay that information to the irrigators who work under him.”

It Takes a Village
To prioritize, organize, coordinate, delegate, run the high- and low-flow reports, walk the property, and double and triple check to make sure the work was done right, it takes a host of employees, contractors, and managers. To this end, Ladera Ranch homeowners’ association contracts with Merit Property Management to provide management services for LARMAC. Merit Property Management in turn contracts with Mosaic Consulting to act as the horticultural and landscape managers for all those activities. Water Concern works directly with Mosaic Consulting, and O’Connell does the actual landscape work as directed by Water Concern and Mosaic. If it sounds like a lot of managerial layers for an irrigation and landscaping operation, consider the number of daily tasks involved with keeping 750 acres of an award-winning development looking like a photograph on a Web site. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Water Efficiency Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Water Efficiency email newsletter!