Chapter
Jul 11, 2012

Cost-Benefit Allocation of Selected Low Impact Development Techniques versus the Conventional Method

Publication: World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2012: Crossing Boundaries

Abstract

One of the most exciting new trends in stormwater management today is the movement by many cities, counties, states, and private-sector developers toward the increased use of Low Impact Development (LID) to help protect and restore water quality and reduce rainwater runoff rate. LID comprises a set of approaches and practices that are designed to reduce runoff rate and pollutants from the site at which they are generated. By using infiltration, evapotranspiration, and reuse of rainwater, LID techniques manage and control water at the source and prevent or reduce the impact of development on rivers, streams, lakes, coastal waters, and ground water. This paper includes the most commonly implemented LID techniques, the available unit cost for each LID technique, and case studies. The paper is focused on proving that low impact development techniques will reduce the stormwater management land requirement and the overall cost of stormwater mitigation, while also providing stormwater quality benefits and making the resulting land and building projects more aesthetically pleasing and marketable. A weighting/rating system was designed to show the tradeoffs and benefits between the LID development techniques versus the conventional construction method. Weighting factors such as site preparation, stormwater management, street paving, sidewalk paving, landscaping, aesthetics, quality, and the cost of meeting local and other rules and regulations were incorporated. The goal was to evaluate cost-benefit allocation for projects using selected LID techniques versus the conventional construction method. The allocation was tested with the eight LID case studies and worked well in final positive allocation values for six LID cases (where LID was clearly justified) and two negative allocation values (where the conventional construction method was selected).

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this chapter.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2012
World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2012: Crossing Boundaries
Pages: 3540 - 3553

History

Published online: Jul 11, 2012

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

ASCE Technical Topics:

Authors

Affiliations

Kathlie S. Jeng-Bulloch, Ph.D. [email protected]
P.E., D.WRE
The City of Houston, Department of Public Works and Engineering, Office of the City Engineer, 17123 Carriage Dale Ct., Spring, Texas 77379. E-mail: [email protected]
Jerry Rogers, Ph.D. [email protected]
P.E., D.WRE
The University of Houston, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 12127 Old Oaks, Houston, Texas 77024. E-mail: [email protected]

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Download citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

View Options

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Paper
$35.00
Add to cart

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Paper
$35.00
Add to cart

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share with email

Email a colleague

Share