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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“We communicate daily on the phone with each other, three, four, five times a day,” says Steffey. “If Todd [Coward] is just at his computer scheduling irrigation all day, without communicating with the others, then there’s going to be a lot of schedules that will be broken. We’ve got a mow schedule, a sports field schedule, and we’re walking the slopes literally daily. It’s definitely a team event.”

The job of orchestrating all the different arms and legs together into one cohesive, forward-moving organism requires communication. In addition to the daily phone calls from Beebe to Steffey or Coward to Steffey or Schaff to Coward, there are weekly meetings between Mosaic, Water Concern, and O’Connell concerning the day-to-day details and a monthly meeting where all parties sit in with Beebe for a bigger picture overview.

In addition to these meetings, Coward is in almost daily contact with the Santa Margarita Water District to coordinate how much recycled water Ladera Ranch needs based on reports from the weather stations, soil samples, ET, and the local weather forecast. Based on that information, the operator at the Chiquita Water Reclamation Plant, which provides Ladera with its recycled water for irrigation, predicts how much water to produce on a daily, weekly, or even monthly basis. When recycled water runs $757 per acre-foot ($1.74 per 100 cubic feet), regular communication like this keeps costs down—savings that are passed on to the homeowners. Considering Ladera Ranch’s daily consumption of irrigation water is between 2 and 5.5 million gallons, those savings add up fast.

“When I know rain is coming, I’ll shut the system down a day or two before and save 2 million to 3 million gallons a day,” says Coward. “When the rain comes, it’s useful rain that soaks in instead of running off.”

Recycled Water
Ladera Ranch was designed with a dual-distribution irrigation system, so the conversion to recycled water in 2005 when the Chiquita Water Reclamation Plant went online was seamless.

Obviously, using recycled water is the right thing to do from an environmental standpoint; however, recycled water still costs the same as domestic, which is counterintuitive.

According to Ferons, the biggest advantage to using recycled water is consistency. For example, when the Santa Margarita Water District shut its domestic water system down for a week in March 2007, the first customers it took off were the central irrigation systems because the water district was living off its storage for a week.

“From an emergency point of view or a reliability point of view, [Ladera Ranch] is fairly drought resistant,” says Ferons.

Using recycled water on such a large scale also benefits the Santa Margarita Water District, and therefore Ladera Ranch and its homeowners because it flattens the overall demand curve for domestic water, which helps the district keep costs down.

“It’s kind of a weird business in that you’re trying to encourage your customers not to use the product as much as possible,” says Ferons.

The principle drawback to Ladera Ranch’s use of reclaimed water for irrigation is that the Santa Margarita Water District currently doesn’t have a separate reservoir for storing recycled water (the proposed Ortega Seasonal Storage Reservoir is four or five years away from completion). “Once that’s built, we’ll be able to maximize the use of the reclaimed water and eliminate the need for supplemental flows during the summer when the peak demands can exceed capacity of the treatment plant,” explains Ferons. “It’s really important to use the local sources of recycled water as much as possible; otherwise, we’re importing water from over 200 miles away only to dump it on the ground—doesn’t make a lot of sense.”

Another potential disadvantage of using recycled water is the accumulation of salts in the soil and chlorine burning the turf. With heavy soils that have a high clay content, like those at Ladera, overwatering to push the salts below the root zone doesn’t work—you just end up with more runoff. According to Coward, however, neither chlorine nor soil salt content is a problem at Ladera, although he does have some reservations about salt buildup over time.

The Circle of Life
One of the most interesting uses of recycled water at Ladera Ranch is the Sienna Botanica riverine watershed system that runs through the middle of the development. Once a low-flowing creek, “The Botanica” now collects some of the storm drain water from the community. This water is then “cleaned” by cattails, bulrushes, and local vegetation that line the streambed that eventually runs into the Horne Basin at the southern end of the development. There is even an overflow system built into the creek. When the flow gets too high, water is diverted into pipes that carry the overflow water beneath the creek down to the Horne Basin.

The Santa Margarita Water District has constructed a system by which Horne Basin water will be pumped back to where it merges with the recycled water from the Chiquita facility, thus providing another source of irrigation water that previously would have been lost to the ocean. This additional reusable water resource will be up and running by summer 2007.

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Not surprisingly, the level of recycling efficiency at Ladera Ranch extends beyond water to include a mulching program that transforms the more than 80 cubic yards of greenwaste generated daily into ground cover used back under the plants where it originated.

However, the most entrepreneurial recycling program in use at Ladera Ranch actually involves the employees at Mosaic Consulting. Virtually everyone who works for Mosaic knew each other when they all worked for the landscape department at Disneyland. Over the past eight years, Steffey and his partner Devin Sanders have lured their old coworkers away from Disneyland to join them at Mosaic. “We have basically hired some of our employees from Disneyland,” Steffey says. “So when people tell us, ‘Make it look like Disneyland,’ we quickly say, ‘No, we’re going to make it look better.’”

Author's Bio: Mark Saunders is a professor at Front Range Community College.

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