Blue-Green approach
Blue infrastructure typically includes features such as ponds, shallow vegetated channels (swales), detention basins and wetlands. On the other hand, Green infrastructure refers to natural land and plant based ecological treatment systems. This comprises green open space, recreation grounds/parks, woodlands, and domestic gardens.
Both Blue and Green infrastructure are designed to slow water down (attenuate) before it enters watercourses, provide areas to store or harvest water for re-use and encourage water to infiltrate into the ground. These features also act as natural cleaning agents, reducing the quantity of sediment and level of contaminants within surface water runoff through settlement or biological breakdown of pollutants.
Blue and Green infrastructure fall under the umbrella of Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS), a term used in the United Kingdom, known as low-impact development or Best Management Practice (BMP) in the United States and Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD) in Australia.
In the UK SuDS gained prominence following the Sir Michael Pitt Review, which concluded that SuDS are an effective way to reduce, in particular, the risk of surface water flooding.
In the wake of the review, proposals to increase the uptake of SuDS were included in the Flood and Water Management Act 2010. The Act necessitates better management of flood risk and gave a new responsibility to the Environment Agency for developing a National Strategy for Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management (FCERM), and a new responsibility to county councils and unitary authorities, as Lead Local Flood Authorities (LLFAs), to co-ordinate flood risk management in their respective area.
New development, particularly those on greenfield land (undeveloped land) offers an important opportunity to manage surface water better than has been done traditionally and to employ the blue-green approach.
Case study: Rain Gardens
A good example of retrofitting SuDS into the existing built environment are the 21 Rain Gardens situated in Nottingham, UK. Within the highly urbanised area, a total of 972 properties fall within the floodplain of the Day Brook, a heavily modified watercourse, with Ribblesdale Road running parallel to its upper reaches.
The Rain Gardens use a combination of clean stone aggregate and proprietary water attenuation cells to create storage space beneath a planted topsoil layer. Each Rain Garden has a storage capacity of 15 m3, which generates a total storage capacity of 315 m3 for all 21 gardens. They are designed to capture runoff from approximately 5,500 m2 of Ribblesdale Road.
The Rain Gardens act to reduce the peak rate and volume of runoff draining to the local sewer system and thence the Day Brook. Preliminary hydraulic modelling of the Rain Gardens suggests a 33% (~50m3) reduction in the volume of runoff reaching the sewer system during a 1 in 1 return period storm (100% likelihood of occurrence in any given year).
The recent floods in the UK highlight a growing need to re-think and adapt the ways in which we manage surface water runoff in urbanised areas. The Blue-Green approach has proven to be effective at new developments and in the case of retrofitting SuDS into the existing built environment.
With the recent changes to planning and surface water management policy it is hoped that the Blue-Green approach will become normal, everyday practice.
Michael Underwood is a hydrologist at Envireau Water, a specialist water management and environment consultancy. For more information, email: [email protected].
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