Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 

View Larger Image

Stormwater Management for Smart Growth


by Allen P. Davis, Richard H. McCuen

List Price: $149.00
Price: $118.55
You Save: $30.45 (20%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 1336331
Studio: Springer
Binding: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 368
Publication Date: August 16, 2005
Publisher: Springer


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description

The challenges faced by professionals as related to the management of stormwater runoff are rapidly changing. First-generation stormwater management focused on providing flood protection and limiting peakflow, whereas now a greater emphasis is being placed on water quality. Consequently, stormwater management is shifting with more emphasis on treatment practices and techniques to improve stormwater quality to protect against stream, river and estuary degradation.

Stormwater Management for Smart Growth emphasizes a multidisciplinary approach to solving problems related to water quantity and quality issues associated with urban development. State-of-the-art control methods that integrate concepts related to both quantity and quality goals are presented. From a fundamental overview of supporting information on water quality, statistics and hydrology to detailed sections devoted to treatment and management practices, this book contains the latest information available on stormwater management.

The book includes:

- Emphasis on both hydrologic and water quality issues throughout all sections

- Comprehensive coverage of stormwater management practices, including design, performance, and maintenance issues

- Inclusion of many natural and vegetated stormwater management systems

- Coverage of pollutant and runoff volume reduction through smart growth and low impact development practices



CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 2.0 based on 1 review)

Nothing new here  
An integrated treatment of state-of-the-art stormwater quality and quantity as practiced for smart growth would be a valuable timely contribution to the literature. The two knowledgeable well-published authors have the depth of experience necessary to take on this challenge.

Unfortunately this expensive book is largely a standard summary of state-of-the practice "design event" stormwater methods from 10-15 years ago with very little new or original material and virtually no "state-of-the-art" content as advertised.

The book would be acceptable as a text for a one-semester undergraduate course on stormwater engineering computations for a program aimed at practitioners - i.e. how to do standard calculations to get permit approvals for your client. Smart growth as highlighted in the book's title seems present in this text only incidentially - as in "these standard computations could be applied in a smart growth development too".

The hydrology presented is standard curve number hydrology without any substantive treatment of the application of CN computations for detailed sub-parcel designs for onsite controls. The consistent underestimation of small storm runoff by CN is not substantively addressed; neither are the significant differences between runoff computations with weighted CN vs. weighted runoff for areas with significant impervious area, or treating runon from disconnected impervious area in pervious area runoff. Current state-of-the-practice design hydrology - like the Delaware Urban Runoff Management Model (DURMM) or Robert Pitt's research on urban runoff as implemented in SLAMM is not addressed. Most disappointing is the single emphasis on "design event" computations with no connection to continuous hydrology or - how infiltration & interception practices can be integrated with detention and floodways in total site design over the full range of stormwater flows.

Treatment of green roofs, is minimal 1-2 pages - basically computation of void space in the planting mix - as the design storage volume; treatment of pervious pavement & structural soils, is absent.

The text would serve as a useful reference in basic methods for a practitioner. Designers, students, engineers, and environmental scientists looking for stormwater management methods for environmentally sensitive design will ikely be disappointed in this book
January 26, 2008


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

Stormwater Management for Land Development: Methods and Calculations for Quantity Control
by Thomas A. Seybert

Rain Gardens: Managing Water Sustainably in the Garden and Designed Landscape
by Nigel Dunnett, Andy Clayden

Sustainable Landscape Construction: A Guide to Green Building Outdoors, Second Edition
by J. William Thompson, Kim Sorvig

Land Development Handbook
by Dewberry & Davis

Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things
by William McDonough, Michael Braungart

© 2009 BrightSurf.com