The Village of Groton enjoys a reliable supply of water produced at this microfiltration plant.
Click here to enlarge imageVillage officials asked engineering consultants, CT Male of Gloversville, N.Y., to recommend strategies for solving the problem.
“Our assessment was that slow-sand, disposable membrane, or microfiltration would be good choices,” says CT Male regional office manager Alexandra Rhodes, P.E. “In the end, the Village decided to go with the Pall Aria system because of its flexibility, small footprint, and quick implementation time.”
Cost analysis also indicated that the Pall Aria system was the Village’s least expensive filtration option.
The Solution
With funding from a Small Cities Grant and other sources, the Village purchased a Pall Aria AP-4 system with 14 Microza* microfiltration modules and constructed a building to house it near the water source. As configured, the system can treat an average demand of 220,000 gallons per day up to a peak demand of 432,000 gallons per day.
Within six months of the recommendation by CT Male, the new plant was installed, online, and operating with consistent reliability. Director of public works Jim Shurtleff and three licensed employees are able to monitor the operation remotely over a networked computer located in the public works facility.
“Pall gave us the most cost-effective way to solve the water issue,” Shurtleff says. “We’re very happy with the way it turned out. The system pretty much runs itself, which is great since everybody around here has multiple job responsibilities.”
Ongoing testing indicates the Pall Aria system is enabling the Village of Groton to fully comply with EPA water quality regulations.
“The monthly operations reports show turbidity has been excellent,” Andersson says. “We’ve advised other communities to come and look at the Groton operation.”