K-State Landscape Architecture Students Applying What They're Learning in Class to Storm Water Management on Campus
Courtesy of K-State Media Relations and
Marketing
Landscape
architecture students at Kansas
State University
are getting the chance to develop their skills while solving a problem in their
own backyard.
The
students are collaborating with faculty and professionals on a project to
creatively resolve challenging storm water management problems on campus. The
project is designed to help students recognize the value of water and its role
in sustaining developed landscapes and natural ecosystems.
On
Friday, October 27, participating students, faculty and professionals will
break into teams for a planning-design charrette from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Team members will work together to develop conceptual plans that establish a
vision of landscape features that could be implemented in strategic locations
along Campus Creek, and generate more detailed design ideas for improving storm
water management. The primary goal is to reduce negative impacts related to
storm water runoff quantity and quality within the heart of the K-State campus,
according to Lee Skabelund, K-State assistant professor of landscape
architecture and regional and community planning.
Areas
to be studied include the large parking lots north of Weber Hall, upland and
stream corridor settings near the International
Student Center,
and the area between Campus Creek, Boyd Hall and the Derby Dining
Center from Claflin Road to Petticoat Lane.
Each
team will develop a detailed design for one or more storm water mitigation
improvements, typically referred to as “best management practices.”
Project teams will define other creative, feasible and low-maintenance ways of
slowing, temporarily holding, filtering and infiltrating storm water runoff.
They also will consider appropriate stream bank and stream corridor
improvements that could be implemented along Campus Creek. Teams will present
their proposed solutions during an open house from 4-6:30 p.m. in Seaton Hall.
The
outcome of the charrette is expected to be a number of different detailed
design solutions for the target area and increased understanding of storm water
management issues and design applications on the part of students, K-State administrators
and others who participate in or subsequently learn about the project,
according to Skabelund.
Several
lectures by guest experts will be given prior to the charrette. The first
lecture will be by Andrea Kevrick at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, October 26, in Hale
Library’s Hemisphere Room. Kevrick will discuss integrating storm water
planning, design and management. Kevrick is principal of InSite Design Inc.,
based in Ann Arbor, Michigan,
and is an adjunct associate professor at the School
of Natural Resources and Environment
at the University
of Michigan.
Tom
Price will discuss integrating storm water planning, design and management in
ways that reduce flooding and the degradation of streams, rivers and lakes,
improve water quality, and other issues in a presentation at 3:30 p.m. October
26 in the Hemisphere Room. Price is principal water resources engineer at
Conservation Design Forum Inc., in Elmhurst,
Illinois.
During
the charrette, Dennis Haag of Tetra Tech EM Inc., Lenexa, will assist by sharing ideas about
the selection and use of appropriate, well-adapted plants for storm water
planning and design. Haag has more than 40 years of professional experience in
the fields of environmental and biological sciences.
The
charrette is sponsored by the K-State department of landscape architecture and
regional and community planning and the K-State student chapter of the American
Society of Landscape Architects. Financial support is being provided by the
Kansas Department of Health and Environment and K-State’s WaterLINK, a service
learning project of the Kansas Campus Compact.
For more information, contact:
Lee Skabelund, 785.532.2431
Diane Potts, 785.532.1090
