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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Because of the improvement project, water from the lower Stone Canyon reservoir no longer feeds directly into the pipelines that service the water department’s customers. Instead, costumers receive water from the Los Angeles Aqueduct Filtration Plant in Sylmar, thanks to the new bypass pipeline.

A second reason for the project came soon after the terrorist attacks on New York City and the Pentagon in 2001. The water department took on a five-year project to upgrade security at the city’s water system. As part of this huge effort, the department installed new security cameras and intrusion alarms at the Stone Canyon reservoir complex.

“We had to take action once the state changed the water-quality regulations for water-treatment plants,” Wells says. “We knew that our best option was to take the lower reservoir out of service. We had runoff from the canyon that if it got into the lower reservoir it went directly into our upper reservoir, too. It was more cost effective to take treated water directly from the Los Angeles Reservoir in Sylmar and provide that to our customers instead.”

The lower reservoir at Stone Canyon is now out of service. But, that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have any purpose. Department officials are now using it as an emergency water-storage facility. For instance, if the city suffers through a particularly fierce 100-year storm, department officials can overfill Stone Canyon’s upper reservoir, and use the lower reservoir to handle this overflow. The department could then treat the overfill from the lower reservoir with Stone Canyon’s new membrane filtration plant before distributing it to its customers.

“We wouldn’t be putting any new water in that lower reservoir, but if we do have storm water that results in an excess of water, we could treat it and distribute it,” Wells adds. “If there was some other kind of emergency situation, say we lost water coming into the site, we could reconnect to that reservoir and issue a boil-water notice. At least that way, we’d be able to keep water coming into the pipes.”

An Important Pipeline
A key component of the Stone Canyon project is the 8,000-foot-long bypass pipeline that funnels water past the lower reservoir. Installing that pipeline was also one of the project’s biggest challenges.

That’s because engineers decided that about 4,200 feet of the pipeline should be submerged at the bottom of Stone Canyon’s lower reservoir. By submerging that much of the pipeline, project engineers not only saved the department significant money–—about $10 million–—but provided a respite to the water-treatment facility’s neighbors. For every foot of pipeline submerged, the department’s construction crews saved a foot of costly, and messy, tunneling work.

“Submerging the pipe saved a significant amount of money,” says Richard Bentwood, principal project manager with Parsons ES in Pasadena, CA, the company that designed the high-density polyethylene pipeline used in the project. “It was much less costly to put that pipe in the bottom of the reservoir than it would have been to tunnel the full length. We were offsetting close to 4,200 feet of tunneling. That 4,200 feet would have been very costly.”

By submerging the pipe, the water department also maintained good relations with the homeowners of Los Angeles’ Bel Air neighborhood. “There just wasn’t any routing that would have been acceptable to the homeowners,” Bentwood says. “No matter what alignment they would have chosen, it would have been very invasive. It would have created a number of environmental issues.”

Maintaining good relations with Bel Air residents was crucial. Water department officials had worked with nearby residents for 10 years to develop plans for a water-treatment site that was as unobtrusive as possible.

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This process entailed several compromises, on both the part of residents and the water department. For instance, based on the concerns of homeowners, the department did scale down the size of Stone Canyon’s new membrane filtration plant. Department officials were able to do this by taking the lower reservoir offline and sending treated water through the bypass pipeline and two bypass tunnels. With the lower reservoir not in service, Stone Canyon did not need as large of a filtration plant.

The footprint for the pumping and membrane filtration building is small, about 150 feet by 150 feet. This concession is just one example of the delicate relationship building that took place during the project. Department officials met frequently during the planning and construction phases of the project with members of the Bel Air Association, Glenridge Homeowners Association, Residents of Beverly Glen and the Roscomare Valley Association. Next Page >

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