2006 UNH STORMWATER
CENTER TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATION WORKSHOPS
The UNH Stormwater
Center will
be demonstrating stormwater technologies at its unique facility.
What
will the workshop cover? The performance, cost, suitability,
operations, and maintenance issues associated with different stormwater
management unit processes.
What is
the learning format? Field facility tour followed by a
working lunch. Notes will be provided.
Who
should attend? Elected officials, appointed officials, town
administrators, engineers, land planners, landscape architects, natural
resource managers
When are
the workshops?
|
Event
|
Dates
|
Sponsor
|
Status
|
|
Workshop # 1
|
4/13/2006
|
Casco Bay
Estuary Partnership and MEDEP
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 2
|
4/27/2006
|
CZM & MA LID Working Group (20 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 3
|
5/9/2006
|
Appledore Engineering (18 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 4
|
5/18/2006
|
GBNERR (20 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 5
|
6/8/2006
|
Town of Andover
(30 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 6
|
6/20/2006
|
Wells NERR (20 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 7
|
9/12/2006
|
NEIWPCC (20 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 8
|
9/21/2006
|
Wells NERR (20 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 9
|
10/10/2006
|
CZM & MA LID Working Group (20 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 10
|
10/26/2006
|
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 11
|
11/9/2006
|
MEDOT (15 spaces)
|
Open
|
|
Workshop # 12
|
11/21/2006
|
|
Open
|
Where
are the workshops? The workshops begin and end at the
Center’s field facility. There are NO BATHROOMS at this field
facility. After a two-hour field visit the attendees will move by bus to
a classroom for lunch and discussions.
What is the Workshop Schedule?
9:30-11:30
Site
Tour meeting at facility located West Edge Parking lot
11:40
Bus
to Gregg Hall
11:45-1:15
Working
Lunch
1:45 Bus
back to West Edge
Registration
and Enrollment: Online registration is now available at http://www.erg.unh.edu/cstevreg/register.asp.
The registration fee is $50 for the workshop and should be made payable to UNH
and mailed to UNH Stormwater Center Workshops, 35 Colovos Road, Gregg Hall, Room 214, Durham, NH,
03824. The New
Hampshire Estuaries Project will cover fees for Planning Board and Conservation
Commission Members for the 42 Coastal Watershed communities. Materials and
lunch will be provided. Enrollment in each workshop is limited to 35 people. Attendees
will be accommodated on a “first-come, first-served” basis. If you
have any questions, please contact Maddy Wasiewski
by email at Maddy.Wasiewski@unh.edu.
Registration cancellations must be received at least 24 hours in advance.
Workshop Overview
The UNH Stormwater
Center research addresses
the concerns that while many conventional stormwater treatments effectively
reduce peak flows, they commonly do not improve many water quality constituents
(sediment, nutrients, metals, hydrocarbons, and/or microorganisms). Many
stormwater plans and actions involve some structural measure to remedy the
environmental impact of stormwater. Numerous institutions and vendors have
developed designs to achieve desirable water quality and storm volume
reduction. Although many of these devices are invented or developed on a sound
theoretical foundation, few undergo the rigors of independent scientific
testing.
In August of 2004 the Center’s
field research facility came online. This field research facility serves as
both a site for testing stormwater treatment processes as well as for
technology demonstrations. The testing results and technology demonstrations are
meant to assist in the planning, design, and implementation of stormwater
management strategies.
The research facility
houses three categories of stormwater treatment processes: conventional
structural devices, Low Impact Development (LID) designs, and manufactured
devices. Specifically there are 13 technologies: manufactured devices
(infiltration device, filtration device, manhole retrofits, etc), a sand
filter, a bioretention system, a gravel wetland, porous asphalt, a tree filter,
a detention pond, and a swale. In addition to this main field facility, the
Center researchers will be studying measures to treat and/or minimize
stormwater at the source, for example street vacuuming and snow dumps.
When
you first visit the research facility, it is remarkable to note how the
footprint of the different treatment processes varies, even though all are
sized to treat the same water volume and the same peak flow. This reflects the
unique applications of the various devices. Not all devices perform the same
with respect to removing contaminants and reducing peak flow. Some devices are
more appropriate for urban environments in which limited space exists for
treatment, while other devices may be more appropriate for situations in which
more land is available.
The
Center’s program is a collaborative effort with participation from
federal, state, and municipal agencies along with industry and academia. The
Center is funded through CICEET whose mission is to supports the scientific
development of innovative technologies for understanding and reversing the
impacts of coastal and estuarine contamination and degradation.
For more
information, please visit our website or contact us.
|
Dr. Robert M. Roseen
Director, UNH Stormwater Center
Environmental Research Group
University of New Hampshire
Durham, NH
03824-3534
603-862-4024 [ph]
603-862-3957 [fax]
robert.roseen@unh.edu
|

|
Dr. Thomas Ballestero
Principal Investigator, UNH
Stormwater Center
Environmental Research Group
University of New Hampshire
Durham, NH
03924-3534
603-862-1405 [ph]
603-862-3957 [fax]
tom.ballestero@unh.edu
|
The UNH Stormwater
Center is housed within the Environmental
Research Group (ERG) at the University of New Hampshire (UNH) in Durham, New
Hampshire. Funding for the Center program has been
provided by the Cooperative Institute for Coastal and Estuarine Environmental
Technology (CICEET) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
Directions
to the UNH Stormwater
Center Facility and to Gregg Hall
University of New
Hampshire Durham,
New Hampshire
The
UNH campus map may be found at: http://www.unh.edu/welcome/campusmap.html
and the field facility at the West End Parking lot is the blue-colored lot on
the upper left hand corner of the map.
From I-95
Once in New Hampshire on I-95, take Exit 5
(Rt-16/US-4/Portsmouth(US-1 BYP)) towards Newington.
You will now be on the Spaulding Turnpike heading North. Drive approximately 5
miles to Exit 6 West (Route 4 West/Durham/UNH). It's the last exit before a
toll and you will see the toll booth as you take the exit. Follow Route 4 West
approximately 4 miles past the UNH/Durham Route 108 exit and through one
traffic light. About 1/2 mile after the light, take the Route 155A Exit
(UNH/Durham). At the end of the exit ramp turn left (going east) towards Durham on Route 155A. You
will see a large red barn complex to your left and athletic fields ahead of
you.
Go to the
additional sections below for the Stormwater Center Facility or Gregg Hall
directions.
From Rt 4 to the Stormwater Center Facility
Follow 155A for approximately ¼ mile past the
first group of buildings (e.g. NH Fish & Game) and Leavitt Lane. Take an immediate right at
the UNH sign for Printing & Marking/ West Edge Parking onto an unnamed
road. Continue up the hill to the stop sign, and continue straight until
you reach the farthest edge of the parking area. Take a right and
continue until you reach the northwest corner of the West Edge Lot. There is a
small parking area on the left that extends out from this corner.
Immediately beyond this is the CSTEV facility. Site deliveries should be
made here in coordination with the site supervisor.
From the Center of Campus
to the Stormwater
Center Facility
Follow
Main Street
out from the center of Campus approximately 1 mile past the horse barns (on
your right), Rt 155A and the USFS building on your left. Take a left at
the UNH sign for Printing & Marketing/ West Edge Parking onto West Edge Road.
Continue up the hill to the stop sign, and continue straight until you reach
the farthest edge of the parking area. In front of you is a sign pointing to
the right for the facility. Take a right and continue until you reach the
northwest corner of the West Edge Lot. There is a small parking area on the
left that extends out from this corner. The sign for the Stormwater Center
can be seen on the edge of the lot. Immediately beyond this is the Stormwater Center facility.
To Gregg Hall
Follow 155A through a short stretch of fields towards
campus. As you come into the main campus, you will come to a traffic light.
Turn right onto College Ave.
You will pass Taylor
and Pettee Halls on your right (approx. 300 feet). Immediately after
Pettee Hall, turn right onto Colovos
Road (you should see the large power plant
smokestack on your left). Continue straight under a narrow railroad trestle and
bear left (still Colovos Road).
Travel a couple hundred feet and bear left again (Water Works Road) and then take an
immediate right into the Gregg Hall parking lot access drive. Gregg hall is straight
ahead (large red brick building with slate roof). You can't miss
it. Park in the parking lot and enter through the main north doors.
Ship to address: Stormwater Center
Facility West Edge Lot, NW corner Durham,
NH 03824,
603-767-7091
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert M. Roseen, Ph.D.
Director, The UNH
Stormwater Center
Environmental Research Group
35 Colovos Road
University of New
Hampshire
Durham, NH 03824
Phone: 603-862-4024 Fax: 603-862-3957
e-mail: robert.roseen@unh.edu
web: www.unh.edu/erg/cstev/