September-October 2008

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Raincatcher's Delight

The Seaholm project is an example of how Austin has promoted rainwater harvesting as part of a multi-faceted water conservation program.

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By Margaret Buranen

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The first part of an unusual $100 million development project opens this year, on 7.8 acres of land in the southwest quadrant of downtown Austin, TX. The historic buildings of Seaholm—the city’s former electric power plant—will form the core of this combined municipal and private project. Seaholm’s main generator building, and three of the four other existing power plant buildings, will be renovated. The completed project will consist of an additional 90,000 square feet, including a two-story office building, shops, and in 2010, a 22-story hotel-condominium tower. An innovative part of the new Seaholm is its raincatchment system.

Water conservation is important in Austin. The city’s Water Conservation Task Force (WCTF), which has been studying best practices for wise water usage, presented its recommendations in early 2007. In May 2007, the Austin City Council unanimously approved a resolution, directing the city manager to implement the recommended measures developed by the WCTF. These measures are powerful enough to save over 32 million gallons of water a day during the peak season.

Any water use reductions by large local entities, such as Seaholm, would not only be noticed by the public and municipal officials, but much appreciated. One such measure is rain harvesting.

“The city of Austin has promoted rainwater harvesting as an integral part of a multi-faceted water conservation program for many years,” says Greg Kiloh, project manager for the city’s Economic Growth and Redevelopment Services Office.

Other raincatching systems in Austin include those at the Zilker Botanical Garden, the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, the American Botanical Council, Feather and Fur Animal Hospital, The Natural Gardener, Parque Zaragoza Recreation Center, and HEB Grocery. At least three elementary schools—Robert E. Lee, Pickle (named after former US Congressman Jake Pickle), and Summit—and Westwood High School have raincatching systems to help their students learn about water conservation. 

 

Seaholm is one of the most significant developments in the history of Austin.

Photos: Austin History Center

For aesthetic reasons, above-ground tanks were not an option for Seaholm.

Seaholm has a raincatching system because John Rosato, CEO of Seaholm Power LLC and Southwest Strategies Group, has an interest in sustainable development. Among those meeting with Seaholm’s principals as they planned the development was Dr. Kent Butler, associate dean of the University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture (UTSOA).

Butler recalls that several people in those early meetings mentioned the possibility of including such a system. He pursued the idea and says, “Upon digging more deeply into as-built drawings of the old power plant infrastructure, I discovered old cooling water pipes and tankage, left unused and underground, that could possibly be reused for a modern raincatchment and storage system.”

A rain catchment system would not only lower Seaholm development’s water costs, but also reduce the demand on Austin’s municipal water system. This approach is in line with Austin’s collective effort to conserve water.

Catching rain from the large rooftops at Seaholm would also limit stormwater runoff. This benefit is especially important, because Seaholm’s site overlooks Lady Bird Lake, a source of municipal water. Dealing with runoff is a given at Seaholm, considering the large roof areas, plus extensive swaths of impervious pavement. Collecting rainwater reduces the size and, therefore, the cost of any detention facility needed.

Austin has adopted strict criteria for stormwater control, requiring the first flush of approximately 0.8 inches of runoff to be detained and filtered before being released. Seaholm’s irrigation system will have underground pressure-drip lines that will discharge into the landscape root zone even during wet periods. This design is to provide ample reserve storage capacity to receive stormwater runoff from subsequent rain events.

Seaholm’s Austin location made it very convenient for students and faculty at the University of Texas to become involved with the project. The UTSOA has a Center for Sustainable Development that allows the students to have hands-on learning opportunities, such as this development.

Butler and the researchers—nine graduate students in UTSOA’s Community and Regional Planning Program, who were attending Butler’s research seminar—studied the feasibility of installing a rainwater harvesting system at Seaholm, and then evaluated the advantages and disadvantages of various systems. (Their report is available online at www.radiancetx.org/rainwater/rainwater_harvesting_UT.pdf.) The city of Austin has a commitment to green building and sustainability, but any system they recommended had to be cost-effective.

Median rainfall in Austin over the past 75 years is 24.17 inches. Rainfall data used in the model was calculated monthly for 1930–2005. The amount of average monthly rainfall ranges from March with the lowest, 1.81 inches, to May with the highest, 3.78 inches. In setting up the raincatchment feasibility study on Seaholm, the Center for Sustainable Development assumed that only 90% of the rainwater would be caught by any of the various systems that it proposed.

A rainwater coefficient of 0.9 gallons of water per square foot of roof area for every inch of rainfall was used for calculating the total rainwater that could be collected. Using that coefficient ensured that such factors as losses from roof surface evaporation and roof washing were taken into account.

The same rooftops were considered in all possible plans, but they were utilized differently in each plan. The roof on Seaholm’s existing main generator building is approximately 35,000 square feet. The proposed office building’s roof will measure approximately 30,500 square feet. The goal of collecting rain from the two rooftops and storing it was to provide non-potable water for use on the Seaholm site. This water would be needed for irrigation of the extensive landscaping and possibly to supply fountains.

Butler explains that the underlying goal for each of the four plans was “to meet as much of the total demand as possible with rainwater without acquiring large surplus or a deficit of water storage at the end of the year.”

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Since most of the cost of a commercial rainwater collection system is for its storage facilities, adding too much storage capacity can be costly, both in the short term and in the long term. The short-term cost is, of course, for the construction. The long-term cost, for maintenance, could more than offset any savings realized from lower municipal water bills.

Tanks were sized so that minimal water was spilled, and the amount of rainwater to be collected, plus the amount to be used were noted for each month of the year. Although the amount of storage fluctuated heavily at the end of each month, due to higher irrigation needs and less rain collected in the hot, dry months, the system’s storage level at the end of the year was approximately even with minimal net gain or loss. Existing water storage, in front of the main power plant building, holds approximately 57,000 gallons. Whatever plan was chosen; more storage tanks would need to be installed. Depending on the amount of rainfall, the storage capacity required would vary from 30,000 to 100,000 gallons. Next Page >

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