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= About the Low Impact Development Planning and Design Wiki Guide =
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<div class="mainpage_pagetitle">'''LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLANNING AND DESIGN GUIDE'''
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</div>
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{| role="presentation" class="mainpage_layouttable mainpage_middleblock"
  
== About the Wiki Guide Format ==
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<div class="mainpage_boxtitle">'''{{Main page/include|left box title|{{{1|}}}}}'''</div>
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<div class="mainpage_boxcontents">
  
The updated version of the 2010 LID PD Guide is now in a Wiki Guide format....talk about the use of this guide...benefits, etc. If you have any general comments or suggestions, please contact Dean Young.
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<gallery mode="packed-overlay" heights=170px>
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File:Factsheet LIDBMPS.png|[[LID BMP Fact Sheets]]|link= LID BMP Fact Sheets
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File:Upflow MTD.jpg|[[Filtration Manufactured Treatment Devices]]|link=Filtration Manufactured Treatment Devices
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O connor Park Bioretention.JPG|[[Bioretention|Bioretention]]|link=Bioretention
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Construction page lead photo.jpg|[[Construction]]|link=Construction
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OGS example.jpg|[[Oil and Grit Separator|OGS]]|link=Oil and Grit Separator
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YorkU1.jpg|[[Green roofs]]|link=Green roofs
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Image from StormTech.jpg|[[Infiltration chambers]]|link=Infiltration chambers
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Infiltration Testing 2.jpeg |[[Design infiltration rate|Design infiltration rate]]|link=Design infiltration rate
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Clogged pipe.JPG|[[Inspections and Maintenance |Inspection and maintenance]]|link=Inspections and maintenance
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Construction Breakdown Bio Full Infil.PNG|[[Low Impact Development Life Cycle Costing Tool]]|link=Low Impact Development Life Cycle Costing Tool
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LIDTTT.png|[[Low impact development treatment train tool|Low Impact Development Treatment Train Tool]]|link=Low impact development treatment train tool
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PaveDrain.jpg|[[Permeable pavements|Permeable pavements]]|link=Permeable pavements
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File:Plants page title.JPG|[[Plants]]|link=Plants
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Site Conditions Road Right of Way Cover.jpg|[[Screening LID options|Site assessment]]|link=Screening LID options
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LSRCA planters.jpg|[[Stormwater planters|Stormwater planters]]|link=Stormwater planters
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File:Central Parkway - soil cell, stormwater planter.JPG|[[Stormwater Tree Trenches|Stormwater tree trenches]]|link=Stormwater Tree Trenches
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TRCA YorkU grass swale 3.jpg|[[Swales]]|link=swales
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Snow piles.jpg|[[Winter Management|Winter management]]|link=Winter
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</gallery>
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</div>
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We have many more articles. If you don't see what you're looking for, please check the '''[[Table of contents|contents]]''' page or use the search bar.
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<div class="mainpage_boxtitle">'''{{Main page/include|right box title|{{{1|}}}}}'''</div>
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'''Welcome user! We have been looking forward to your arrival.'''
  
{{TextBox|1=Consult the [//meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Contents User's Guide] for information on using the wiki software.}}
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In anticipation we have prepared a short printable form to help direct your critique of the wiki.
  
== About the Contents of this Guide ==
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{{Clickable button|[[Media:Comments.pdf|Download pdf feedback form]]}}
  
The Low Impact Development Stormwater Management Planning and Design Guide
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If you have a shorter comment or observation please use the anonymous feedback box at the bottom of every page.  
(LID SWM Guide) has been developed by Credit Valley Conservation (CVC) and
 
Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) as a tool to help developers,
 
consultants, municipalities and landowners understand and implement more sustainable
 
stormwater management planning and design practices in their watersheds. Many
 
jurisdictions have defined the term low impact development. For this document, the
 
following definition, adapted from the United States Environmental Protection Agency
 
(U.S. EPA, 2007) will be used:
 
  
{{TextBox|1=Low impact development (LID) is a stormwater management strategy that seeks to mitigate the impacts of increased runoff and stormwater pollution by managing runoff as close to its source as possible. LID comprises a set of site design strategies that minimize runoff and distributed, small scale structural practices that mimic natural or predevelopment hydrology through the processes of infiltration, evapotranspiration, harvesting, filtration and detention of stormwater. These practices can effectively remove nutrients, pathogens and metals from runoff, and they reduce the volume and intensity of stormwater flows.}}
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{{Clickable button|[[Table of Contents]]}}
  
The LID SWM Guide provides information and direction to assist engineers, ecologists
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*[[Definition of Low Impact Development|What is low impact development?]]
and planners with landscape-based stormwater management planning and the
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*[[Terminology | Glossary of terms]]
selection, design, construction and monitoring of sustainable stormwater management
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*[[Photographs]]
practices. The focus of this guide is on guidance regarding the planning and design of
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*[[Wander_lonely_as_a_cloud|Browse random pages!]]
structural low impact development practices for stormwater management.
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*[[Acknowledgements]]
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*[[Updates|Subscribe to updates]]
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*[[How to contribute| Email us]]
  
The practice of managing stormwater is continuing to evolve as the science of
 
watershed management and understanding of our watersheds grow. Effective
 
management of stormwater is critical to the continued health of our streams, rivers,
 
lakes, fisheries and terrestrial habitats. CVC and TRCA believe that an improved
 
understanding of the municipal and environmental planning process and the
 
requirements for stormwater management will lead to improvements in management
 
practices and an increasingly standardized and streamlined approach to addressing
 
stormwater throughout the CVC and TRCA watersheds.
 
  
The LID SWM Guide is intended to augment the Ontario Ministry of the Environment
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(OMOE) Stormwater Management Planning and Design Manual (2003). The OMOE
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manual provides design criteria for “conventional” end-of-pipe stormwater management
 
practices such as wet ponds and constructed wetlands but provides only limited
 
information about lot level and conveyance controls. The OMOE manual does, however,
 
emphasize the use of a “treatment train” approach to reduce the impacts of stormwater runoff. A treatment train approach – a combination of lot level, conveyance, and end-ofpipe
 
stormwater management practices – is usually required to meet the multiple
 
objectives of stormwater management, which include maintaining the hydrologic cycle,
 
protecting water quality, and preventing increased erosion and flooding.
 
  
This LID SWM Guide focuses on a number of lot level and conveyance stormwater
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[[File:Toronto-and-Region-Conservation-Authority-logo.png|200px|link=http://trca.on.ca]]
management practices that have been used extensively in Europe, the United States,
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[[File:CVClogo.jpg|150px|link=http://cvc.ca]]
British Columbia and at demonstration sites in Ontario. These practices have only
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[[File:LSRCAlogo.png|150px|link=http://lsrca.on.ca]]
recently been considered for broad application in Ontario as part of the treatment train
 
approach. These low impact development practices include green roofs, bioretention,
 
permeable pavement, soakaways, perforated pipe systems, enhanced grass swales,
 
dry swales and rainwater harvesting. The LID SWM Guide recommends and supports
 
the use of the treatment train approach for stormwater management. Accordingly, the
 
reader is urged to refer to the OMOE manual (OMOE, 2003), as a guide for
 
incorporating more traditional practices such as wet ponds and wetlands into the overall
 
stormwater management planning and design process.
 
 
 
The LID SWM Guide is not intended to limit innovation or restrict the use of creative
 
solutions for stormwater management. Indeed, the OMOE, CVC, TRCA and partner
 
municipalities encourage the development of innovative designs and technologies.
 
 
 
 
 
= Related Documents =
 
This manual is not a stand-alone document. It is intended to augment the Ontario
 
Ministry of the Environment’s 2003 Stormwater Management Planning and Design
 
Manual, which provides design criteria for “conventional” end-of-pipe stormwater
 
management practices such as wet ponds and constructed wetlands. It is also a
 
companion document to other stormwater related guidance documents prepared by
 
CVC and TRCA. Amongst others, these include:
 
 
 
'''CVC'''
 
 
 
• Credit River Water Management Guidelines (CRWMG) (2007);
 
 
 
• Credit River Stormwater Management Criteria (currently under development;
 
will be an appendix to the CRWMG;
 
 
 
• Geomorphic and Meander Belt Guidelines (an appendix to the CRWMG);
 
• Floodline Mapping Guidelines (an appendix to the CRWMG);
 
 
 
• Environmental Impact Report Terms of Reference (an appendix to the
 
CRWMG);
 
 
 
• Technical Guidelines for Floodproofing, 1994 (an appendix to the CRWMG);
 
 
 
• Hydrologic/Hydraulic Modeling (an appendix to the CRWMG Guidelines);
 
 
 
• Guidelines for Hydrogeologic Studies (an appendix to the CRWMG);
 
 
 
• Headwater Assessment Guidelines (an appendix to the CRWMG).
 
 
 
'''TRCA'''
 
 
 
• Planning and Development Procedural Manual (2007);
 
 
 
• Stormwater Management Criteria (currently under development);
 
 
 
• Floodplain Management Guideline; and
 
 
 
• Stream Crossing Guidelines.
 
 
 
= Notice =
 
The contents of this report do not necessarily represent the policies of the supporting agencies. Although
 
every reasonable effort has been made to ensure the integrity of the report, the supporting agencies do
 
not make any warranty or representation, expressed or implied, with respect to the accuracy or
 
completeness of the information contained herein. Mention of trade names or commercial products does
 
not constitute endorsement or recommendation of those products.
 
 
 
= Acknowledgements =
 
'''Project Team:'''
 
 
 
• Toronto and Region Conservation Authority
 
 
 
• Credit Valley Conservation Authority
 
 
 
• Sustainable Technologies Evaluation Program
 
 
 
• Aquafor Beech Limited
 
 
 
• Schollen & Company
 
 
 
• Dougan and Associates
 
 
 
• Kidd Consulting
 
 
 
• Center for Watershed Protection
 
 
 
• Chesapeake Stormwater Network
 
 
 
 
 
'''Funding support for this document was generously provided by:'''
 
 
 
• Region of Peel
 
 
 
• City of Toronto
 
 
 
• Region of York
 
 
 
• Fisheries and Oceans Canada
 
 
 
• Ontario Ministry of the Environment
 
 
 
• Environment Canada’s Great Lakes Sustainability Fund
 

Latest revision as of 13:56, 17 May 2024

LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLANNING AND DESIGN GUIDE

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