March 2008

Upgrades in the Canyon

The Stone Canyon Water Quality Improvement Project has two goals: meeting tough federal surface-water regulations, and providing safe and reliable water to 400,000 Los Angeles residents.

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By Dan Rafter

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Now that the improvement project is mostly done, the lower Stone Canyon reservoir has indeed been taken out of circulation. It now serves primarily as a storage reservoir for emergency use. A new 63-inches-in-diameter bypass pipeline that stretches some 8,000 feet–—about half of this length submerged deep under the lower reservoir’s surface–—allows the department to bypass the lower reservoir and send treated water directly to its customers.

The department’s contractors finished the majority of construction on the improvement project by the end of 2007. Wells says that the new water-treatment facilities at Stone Canyon reservoir will be fully operational in May 2008.

For officials with the department, the day when they turn operations over to the site’s personnel will come as a relief. It will mean that their more-than-decade-long Stone Canyon project is officially over.

“Basically, we built a whole water-treatment site at Stone Canyon,” Wells says. “We built some facilities here that we had never built anywhere before. We had to use some different techniques here that we had never used anywhere else, like when we submerged more than 4,000 feet of pipeline in the lower reservoir. It was an interesting and massive project, and I think it went extremely well.”

The new Stone Canyon water-treatment complex now includes reconstructed pumping and water-treatment facilities, a small filtration plant that can handle 6.5 million gallons of water a day, and the new 60-inch pipeline that allows treated water to bypass the Lower Stone Canyon Reservoir. Construction crews also built the first chlorination station in the department’s history while completing the project.

Department officials could clearly see the finish line as the project moved into the later parts of 2007. It was by then that crews had completed the majority of major construction. By the end of the year, in fact, the department was mostly concentrating on installing new landscaping around the site.

Then, in early 2008, officials with the Los Angeles water department were scheduled to begin the commissioning process of the new Stone Canyon facility. The plan was to have the department oversee the operations at the plant for two to three months. In April or May, the department then expected to turn operations over to Stone Canyon’s operating personnel for full-time service.

A Two-Pronged Reason to Build
The primary impetus for the Stone Canyon improvement project came way back in 1991, when officials with the Los Angeles water department determined that the lower Stone Canyon reservoir would violate the new stricter regulations contained in the Surface Water Treatment Rule.

The reservoir had been an important part of the department’s water-treatment system. It is large enough to hold 3.38 billion gallons of water, ranking as one of the biggest of the city’s distribution reservoirs. The facility’s upper reservoir, in contrast, only holds 138 million gallons of water. That upper reservoir, though, was built with protections against runoff, including perimeter channels, that the lower reservoir did not contain. Next Page >

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