A high end glamping resort in Costa Rica needed an advanced wastewater system, which had to be prefabricated and transported by boat, to operate in a sensitive environment.
By Allison Blodig
Building a fully environmentally friendly high-end island camping resort in Costa Rica only accessible by small boats and with no dock or centralized infrastructure is no small feat. Billed as the “ultimate glamping experience,” guests come throughout the year to the resort to enjoy the raw experience of a camping expedition in the pristine environment, while enjoying the comforts of a modern resort.
To gain approval to proceed with the resort development, Isla Chiquita owners needed a high yield advanced wastewater treatment system that would preserve the protected island in the Golf of Nicoya. Even more challenging is that the system had to be prefabricated, transported to the island by small boat, installed with no concrete, and be invisible to guests once installed.
Finally, since the property has a limited time concession of 99 years with approximately 50 years remaining, all installations at the site must be removable. In Costa Rica, all islands and beaches are now in the public domain. For existing owners, a 99-year concession right was given with strong regulations related to any changes or property improvements. These include that the concession owner is limited to maintaining existing infrastructure and can only add pre-approved removable infrastructure.
Regulatory oversight
Several regulating bodies were involved in the approval process for the resort. The Ministry of Environment and Energy of Costa Rica (MINAE) manages and protects the environmental resources of the country, as well as coordinating the country's energy theme. Thanks to the work carried out by MINAE, Costa Rica is today among the first places in the World Environmental Performance Index and is recognised worldwide for its efforts in conservation and sustainable development. Today over 25 percent of Costa Rica's total area is under a protection regime; whether public or private.
The Directorate of Environmental Quality Management (DIGECA), part of the MINAE, oversees pollution prevention issues and promotes environmental management (through voluntary mechanisms and regulations) to ensure that public and private activities, work, and projects are framed with a sustainable development vision.
The Ministry of Health is also involved with regulating these systems to protect the public health, approving the location, construction and operation of all wastewater treatment systems in Costa Rica. The Isla Chiquita system was required to meet the Decrete 39887-S-MINAE for construction; which also dictates a minimum of 50 mg/l for the BOD and TSS. Additionally, the treated effluent was required to be <30 mg/l FOG and <150 mg/l BQD. The system cannot exceed 38 dB for environmental noise and no septic odors can be noticeable.
Environmental and logistical challenges
The modular wastewater treatment system design by Bionest Costa Rica, has a design flow of nine m3/day. Because Installation of the systems is between the tents and near the restaurant, any system components needed to be invisible to resort guests. Additionally, due to the location, the system had to operate silently and with no presence of odor anywhere in the area.