Waggonner NOLA

164
David Waggoner: New Orleans as an Integrated Resilience Project

Transcript of Waggonner NOLA

Page 1: Waggonner NOLA

David$Waggoner:$New$Orleans$as$an$

Integrated$Resilience$Project$

Page 2: Waggonner NOLA

RBD U

PERSISTENCE

David Waggonner

Waggonner & Ball

Page 3: Waggonner NOLA

LOUISIANACOASTAL CONDITION

Page 4: Waggonner NOLA

LOUISIANA HIGH+LOW LANDSCAPE

Page 5: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSHURRICANE KATRINA

Page 6: Waggonner NOLA
Page 7: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES COURTYARD CITYDUTCH DIALOGUESCOURTYARD CITY

Page 8: Waggonner NOLA
Page 9: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSHURRICANE KATRINA

Page 10: Waggonner NOLA
Page 11: Waggonner NOLA
Page 12: Waggonner NOLA

LOUISIANA

INDONESIAN DELEGATION TOUR

Page 13: Waggonner NOLA
Page 14: Waggonner NOLA

JAKARTA

PLUIT - INHABITING THE EDGE

Page 15: Waggonner NOLA
Page 16: Waggonner NOLA

JAPAN

KYOTO

Page 17: Waggonner NOLA

JAPAN

KYOTO

Page 18: Waggonner NOLA

JAPAN

KYOTO

Page 19: Waggonner NOLA

JAPAN

KANAZAWA

Page 20: Waggonner NOLA

JAPAN

GUTTER

Page 21: Waggonner NOLA

EDWARD BURTYNSKY

GREENHOUSES

Page 22: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS

VIEUX CARRE

Page 23: Waggonner NOLA
Page 24: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES ROTTERDAM WESTERSINGEL

Page 25: Waggonner NOLA

INTEGRATED FLOOD PROTECTIONROTTERDAM

Page 26: Waggonner NOLA
Page 27: Waggonner NOLA

ARAKAWA WARDSUPER LEVEE

Page 28: Waggonner NOLA

ARAKAWA WARDSUPER LEVEE

Page 29: Waggonner NOLA

BONNET CARRE SPILLWAY

MORGANZAFLOODWAY

OLD RIVERCONTROL STRUCTURE

LINES OF DEFENSE NEW ORLEANS

Page 30: Waggonner NOLA

LINES OF DEFENSE NEW ORLEANS

Page 31: Waggonner NOLA
Page 32: Waggonner NOLA

LINES OF DEFENSE NEW ORLEANS

Page 33: Waggonner NOLA

LINES OF DEFENSENEW ORLEANS

Page 34: Waggonner NOLA

LINES OF DEFENSENEW ORLEANS

Page 35: Waggonner NOLA

LINES OF DEFENSE NEW ORLEANS

Page 36: Waggonner NOLA

LINES OF DEFENSENEW ORLEANS

Page 37: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS SUBSIDENCE

Page 38: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSLIVING IN A BASIN: WALLED CITY

Page 39: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS DUTCH DIALOGUES

Waggonner and Ball Royal Netherlands Embassy

American Planning Association

Page 40: Waggonner NOLA
Page 41: Waggonner NOLA
Page 42: Waggonner NOLA
Page 43: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LIVING LINES OF DEFENSE

Page 44: Waggonner NOLA

SCALES OF STUDYDUTCH DIALOGUES II

Page 45: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES REGIONAL SCALE

Page 46: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES IIGENTILLY

Page 47: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES II GENTILLY

Page 48: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC NEW ORLEANS WATER SYSTEMS

Page 49: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES IIGROUNDWATER MANAGEMENT

Page 50: Waggonner NOLA
Page 51: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES HOFFMAN TRIANGLE

Page 52: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES GUTTER TO GULF

A Water Taxonomy for New Orleans

Contents:

1. The Armature2. Open Canals3. Underground Waterways4. Navigable Waterways5. Historical Remnants

produced by Gutter to Gulf, a joint research and teaching project of the John H. Daniels Faculty of

Architecture, Landscape, and Design, University of Toronto and the Graduate School of Architecture &

Urban Design, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, Washington University in St. Louis

Page 53: Waggonner NOLA

1

6

?

A1

B2

C5

B4

8

8

A6

1

6

?Canal St. Pump Stationpumps water from and unknownsub-Basing in Jeffer-son Parish on the 17th street canal

Surface Condition

Drainage System Taxonomy

Single Box Culvert

Box Culvert under Median

Box Culvert under Street Pipe under Street

Pipe under Median

Double Box Culvert

Triple Box Culvert

Box Culvert Transition

Pipe to Box Culvert

Box Culvert to Open Canal

Pump Station at Flood Wall

Pump Station at Open Canal

1

2

3

4

5

6

B D

A C

7

8

+3’-5’ box culvert+5’-10’ box culvert+10’-15’ box culvert

+3’-5’ pipe+5’-10’ pipe

+25’-30’ open canal30+’ open canal

+15’-20’ box culvert+20’-25’ box culvert+25’-30’ box culvert

pump station

NOLA planning district

Sub-Basin

Legend

1

N0 15,000 ft

2 miles

Where the Water Goes_17th Street Canal

sources:(2007) System Wide Drainage Network; Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans Sewer System Evaluation and Rehabilitation Program

GIS Base Data; Sewer & Water Board Maps; Courtesy Waggonner & Ball Architects

Linear Force Pump; from 2009 Gutter to Gulf Machinery Pump Technology Study(Machinery Pump Technology 1)

Single, Double, & Triple Culvert Details; from San Diego Regional Drainage Engineering Standard Drawings(for shape reference only)

The 17th Street Canal outflow serves drainage sub-basins 1 & 6.

drainage sub-basin 1= 5432 acres drainage sub-basin 6= 3146 acres total = 8628 acres of surface area

= 375,835,000 sq ft

At Capacity 17th Street Canal drains into Lake Pontchartrain at a rate of:

375.8 million sq ft x 1/2 in./hr =

15,600,000 cu. ft./hr

12~14 ft10~12 ft

8~10 ft

6 ~ 8 ft

4 ~ 6 ft 2 ~ 4 ft

0 ~ 2 ft

-2 ~ 0 ft(Sea Level Line)

-4 ~ -2 ft

-8 ~ -6 ft

-6 ~ -4 ft

DUTCH DIALOGUES GUTTER TO GULF

Page 54: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES GUTTER TO GULF

Page 55: Waggonner NOLA

DESIGN OBJECT EARTH

GLOBAL VILLAGE

“The new electronic interdependence recreates the world in the image of a global village.” - Marshall McLuhan -

Page 56: Waggonner NOLA

BRIDGEPORTMAIN STREET

Page 57: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSMAGAZINE STREET

Page 58: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSMARDI GRAS

Page 59: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSLOWLAND STREET

Page 60: Waggonner NOLA

POPULATIONCITY COMPARISON

PopulationJakarta New York CityChennai New Orleans

Density

City 9,600,000 8,500,000 390,0004,700,000

38,000 / sq mi 28,000 / sq mi 2,000 / sq mi28,300 / sq mi

30,200,000 20,100,000 1,250.0009,000,000

4,500 / sq mi 1,500 / sq mi 300 / sq mi19,500 / sq mi

City

Metro

Metro

Page 61: Waggonner NOLA

JAKARTA

19766 MILLION

19899 MILLION

200413 MILLION

POPULATION GROWTH

Page 62: Waggonner NOLA

ELEVATIONINDIA

Page 63: Waggonner NOLA

PALLIKARANAI MARSHCHENNAI

197076%

198057%

199060%

200050%

201035%

197076%

198057%

199060%

200050%

201035%

197076%

198057%

199060%

200050%

201035%

1990

60% water

2010

35% water

1970

76% water

Page 64: Waggonner NOLA

INTERNATIONAL WATER CITIESWATER FIGURE GROUND

Amsterdam, Netherlands Rotterdam, Netherlands

Shaoxing, ChinaNew Orleans, Louisiana

Page 65: Waggonner NOLA

September 2013

:DJJRQQHU��%DOO�Architects

8UEDQ�'HVLJQ

Greater New Orleans

8UEDQ�:DWHU�3ODQ

September 2013

:DJJRQQHU��%DOO�Architects

,PSOHPHQWDWLRQ

Greater New Orleans

8UEDQ�:DWHU�3ODQ

September 2013

:DJJRQQHU��%DOO�Architects

9LVLRQ

Greater New Orleans

8UEDQ�:DWHU�3ODQ

DOCUMENTSGREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLAN

LIVINGWITHWATER.COM

Page 66: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS WATER PLAN PROBLEMS IDENTIFIED

Drainage systems are regularly overwhelmed by too much runoff, causing flooding

Excessive pumping causes the land to sink by lowering groundwater levels

Critical water assets are wasted, hidden behind walls, buried underground, or pumped out of the city

1 2 3

Page 67: Waggonner NOLA

Inhabitation Land Cover

Infrastructure Networks

SoilsWater Biodiversity

NEW ORLEANS PLANNING APPROACH

Page 68: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS WATER MANAGEMENT PARADIGM

Pipe + Pump + Drain

Store DrainSlow

Page 69: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LIVING WATER SYSTEM

Page 70: Waggonner NOLA

Estimated Damages Due to Flooding

Over Next Fifty Years: $7.99 Billion

AVOIDABLE COSTS: FLOODINGGREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLAN

Page 71: Waggonner NOLA

Estimated Damages Due to Subsidence

Over Next Fifty Years: $2.19 Billion

AVOIDABLE COSTS: SUBSIDENCE GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLAN

Page 72: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS REGIONAL COSTS VS BENEFITS

Implementation Costs• detention/retention features• storage basins• drainage improvements

Economic Benefits• direct and indirect job growth• reduced flooding-induced damages• reduced subsidence-induced damages• improved insurability• improved property values

$5.2 Billion

$20.6 Billion

Page 73: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS INVESTMENT PARADIGM

Page 74: Waggonner NOLA

GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLANECOLOGICAL BENEFITS

Page 75: Waggonner NOLA
Page 76: Waggonner NOLA

ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLAN

Page 77: Waggonner NOLA

BACKSLOPE STREETS GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLAN

Page 78: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS INTERCEPTOR STREETS INTERCEPTOR STREETS: PROPOSED NEW ORLEANS WATER PLAN

Page 79: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS INTERCEPTOR STREETS

Page 80: Waggonner NOLA

Katrina Memorial

West End storage

basin and park

�ŽŶŶĞĐƟŽŶƐ�ƚŽ�:ĞīĞƌƐŽŶ�WĂƌŝƐŚ

Lake Avenue

EĞǁ�ĚĞǀĞůŽƉŵĞŶƚƐ�ǁŝƚŚ�mixed-use waterfront

ŚŽƵƐŝŶŐ�

Slow, Store, Drain

ůŽĐĂůůLJ�ǁŝƚŚ�ǀĂĐĂŶƚ�ůŽƚƐ͖�ďĂƐŝŶͲǁŝĚĞ�ǁŝƚŚ�vacant lots

Canal Street Canal

Redesign canal to store

water in rain event;

ƌĞĐŚĂƌŐĞ�ŐƌŽƵŶĚǁĂƚĞƌ�in dry periods

Networks of bike

and pedestrian

ƉĂƚŚǁĂLJƐ

Emergency water

ŽǀĞƌŇŽǁ�ĂŶĚ�ĞǀĞƌLJĚĂLJ�ŇŽǁ�ƚŽ�reduce subsidence

17th Street Canal Upper

lower water level; widen canal;

lower walls; bike and pedestrian

access

Lower capacity

ĨŽƌ�WƵŵƉ�ϲ�

17th Street Canal Lower

ŇƵĐƚƵĂƟŶŐ�ǁĂƚĞƌ�ůĞǀĞůƐ͗�ŚŝŐŚ�ǁŚĞŶ�ĚƌLJ͕ �ĚƌĂŝŶ�ďĞĨŽƌĞ�ŝƚ�ƌĂŝŶƐ

Cascade to slow

stormwater and

ƌƵŶŽī�ƐƚŽƌĂŐĞ

WŽƐƐŝďůĞ�ĞŶůĂƌŐĞĚ�storage capacity

WŽƐƐŝďůĞ�ǁĂƚĞƌ�ƐƚŽƌĂŐĞ�and riverfront

development adjacent

to new development

Xavier University

waterfront development

ďƌŝĚŐŝŶŐ�WĂůŵĞƩŽ��ĂŶĂů

WĂůŵĞƩŽ��ĂŶĂůRaise water levels;

provide pedestrian

ƉĂƚŚǁĂLJƐ�ĂŶĚ�ƌĞĐƌĞĂƟŽŶ

Hollygrove�ƐůŽǁ͕�ƐƚŽƌĞ͕�ĚƌĂŝŶ͖�ƵƟůŝnjĞ�NORA lots and parks

Emergency

stormwater

ŽǀĞƌŇŽǁ

Emergency inlet

to reduce

subsidence

WƵƌŝĮĐĂƟŽŶ�njŽŶĞ�for river water

Bike Trail

WƵŵƉ�ƚŽ�ZŝǀĞƌoutlet for

Claiborne

New inlet for

drinking water

ZĞƚĂŝŶ͕�^ƚŽƌĞ͕�Drain

^ůŽǁ͕�ĚƌĂŝŶ

Split of water

basins

UPTOWN TO BUCKTOWNCOORDINATING INVESTMENTS

Page 81: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAKEVIEW FLOATING STREETS

Page 82: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAKEVIEW FLOATING STREETS

Greater New Orleans Urban Water Plan 21

SchemaƟ c situaƟ on of project area

F l e u r d e L i sn o r m a l s t r e e t

n o r m a l s t r e e t

o u t l e t s t r e e t

To Pump StaƟ on # 12

To pump 12

W e s t E n d

B) Surface Ň ow

A) Subsurface Ň ow

Water flow under gravity

3

3

actions over time

Water in the subsurface drainage system runs into the boxed culvert under Fleur de Lis Drive to Pump StaƟ on #12.

SchemaƟ c longitudinal secƟ on of 40th Street, Fleur de Lis Drive, 38th Street, and a part of West End Boulevard illustrates how surface water Ň ows under gravity.

Note: Exaggerated 10x verƟ cally

38th Street; outlet street

-8Ō

-5Ō

-10Ō

-13Ō

-10Ō a’

a’

a

1

2

2

1

3

3

3

Bioswales convey water from Fleur de Lis Drive to 38th Street, an outlet street, and Į nally into West End. West End drains to Pump StaƟ on #12.

BoƩ om of West EndWeir Weir Weir

Page 83: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MONTICELLO CANAL

Page 84: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MONTICELLO CANAL

Page 85: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MONTICELLO ENGINEERED PROPOSAL

Page 86: Waggonner NOLA

HOEY’S BASIN/MONTICELLO CANAL NEW ORLEANS

Page 87: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS HOEY’S BASIN/MONTICELLO CANAL

Page 88: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS HOEY’S BASIN/MONTICELLO CANAL

Page 89: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS HOLLYGROVE/MONTICELLO CANAL

Page 90: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAKEVIEW AND BUCKTOWN

Page 91: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LONDON AVENUE CANAL

Page 92: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANSLONDON AVENUE CANAL

Page 93: Waggonner NOLA

4

6

8

10

12

VD

)

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

2

0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000

Ele

vaƟ

on

NA

V

Distance from DPS03 (Ō)

London Avenue Canal

4.0

5.0

6.0

7.0

VD

)

Minimum Bank EleǀĂƟŽn 1 Ō FreebŽard 2 Ō FreebŽard ScenariŽ 1

-2.0

-1.0

0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

0.0 2000.0 4000.0 6000.0 8000.0 10000.0

Ele

vaƟ

on

NA

V

Distance from DPS7 (Ō)

Orleans Canal

NEW ORLEANS OUTFALL CANALS

Page 94: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS OUTFALL CANALS

Page 95: Waggonner NOLA

GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLANSTORMWATER FLOW

System scale water storage

Small scale strategies to slow water

Split at the ridge waterworks 5 miles

Page 96: Waggonner NOLA

GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLANPROPOSED WATER FLOWS

Brackish water

Fresh water

Urban wetland filtration 5 miles

Page 97: Waggonner NOLA

CIRCULATING SYSTEMS DUTCH DIALOGUES III

Page 98: Waggonner NOLA

CIRCULATING SYSTEM GREATER NEW ORLEANS URBAN WATER PLAN

Page 99: Waggonner NOLA

Greater New Orleans Water Management StrategyLafitte Blueway Drainage ImpactWaggonner & Ball Architects

NEW ORLEANS LAFITTE BLUEWAY: DRAINAGE IMPACT

Page 100: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAFITTE BLUEWAY: HISTORIC CONNECTIONS

Page 101: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAFITTE CORRIDOR

Page 102: Waggonner NOLA

BRIDGEPORT RAIN GARDEN

Page 103: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAFITTE BLUEWAY: DRY

Page 104: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAFITTE BLUEWAY: WET

Page 105: Waggonner NOLA

LAFITTE BLUEWAY: HISTORIC CONNECTIONSNEW ORLEANS

Page 106: Waggonner NOLA

HISTORIC WATERWAYSROTTERDAM OLD HARBOR

Page 107: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS LAFITTE BLUEWAY: BASIN STREET

Page 108: Waggonner NOLA

NEW MEXICOCHACO CANYON

Page 109: Waggonner NOLA
Page 110: Waggonner NOLA

TOKYOSUNDAY AFTERNOON

Page 111: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: LOUISIANAPROJECTS

Page 112: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: LOUISIANAMULTI-MODAL TERMINAL

Page 113: Waggonner NOLA

LEGEND NEC REGIONAL RAIL STOPNEC REGIONAL RAIL CORRIDOR

REBUILD BY DESIGN: RESILIENT BRIDGEPORT

NEW YORK CITY

BOSTON

BRIDGEPORT

STAMFORD

NEW HAVEN NEW LONDON

PROVIDENCE

NORTHEAST CORRIDOR MODEL FOR THE SOUND

ATLANTIC

Page 114: Waggonner NOLA

This SHQLQVXOD�ODQGVFDSH is clearly

legible in New Haven. A significant area

of downtown is threatened by storm

surge. In general, this is the area built

on artifical fill.

Category 1

Category 2

Category 3

Category 4

This SHQLQVXOD�ODQGVFDSH is clearly

legible in New Haven. A significant area

of downtown is threatened by storm

surge. In general, this is the area built

on artifical fill.

Category 1

Category 2

Category 3

Category 4

NDRC: CONNECTICUT NEW HAVEN

Page 115: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: CONNECTICUT BRIDGEPORT

Page 116: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUESVirginia / Life at Sea Level

Infrastructure at Risk

Page 117: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES VIRGINIANORFOLK TIDAL FLOODING

Page 118: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: VIRGINIANORFOLK 1877

Page 119: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: VIRGINIAFLOOD RISK

Page 120: Waggonner NOLA

DUTCH DIALOGUES VIRGINIAHARBOR PARK

Page 121: Waggonner NOLA

Strategic actions to shape our future city

Resilient New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS CURB TO COAST

Page 122: Waggonner NOLA

CURRENTPAST FUTURE

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS URBAN DELTA

Page 123: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC NEW ORLEANSFRAMEWORK NDRC: NEW ORLEANS FRAMEWORK

Page 124: Waggonner NOLA

EXISTINGSHEET PILE 20-40’ DEEP AVG.PROPOSED TO REMAIN

COMPACTED FILL TO ELEVATE LEVEE TO +10’ MINSECTION AREA 77sf

GABION

2’ MIN FREEBOARD

CONCRETEREVETMENT

20’ 10’

EXISTING GROUND

+5’ CURRENT SAFE WATER LEVEL

-1’~+1’ TYP. TIDAL FLUCTUATION

+15’

+10’

+5’

-5’

-10’

-15’

SEA LEVEL

+15’

+10’

+5’

-5’

-10’

-15’

SEA LEVEL

10'-0"

+8’ USACE PROPOSED SAFE WATERLEVEL AFTER PENDING BUTTRESSING

PROPOSED

EXISTINGTOE OF LEVEE

NEWTOE OF LEVEE

REMOVE WALL (KEEP THE SHEET PILE)ADD GABIONS AND CONCRETE REVETMENT TO STABILIZE THE BANKADD EXTRA FILL TO COVER THE SHEET PILE AND ELEVATE LEVEE TO MAINTAIN SAFE FREEBOARDPLACE A NEW SIDEWALK WHERE THE ORIGINAL WALL WASMAINTAIN EXISTING WATER LEVELS

SIDEWALK

EXISTING PUMP STATION2,900 CFS

PROPOSED PUMP STATION600 CFS

TEMP. PUMP STATION/CLOSURE STRUCTURE

PERM. PUMP STATION/CLOSURE STRUCTURE

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS OUTFALL CANALS

Page 125: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS CITY PARK

Page 126: Waggonner NOLA

SIPHON UNDER ORLEANS CANAL

NEW CONNECTIONS BETWEEN LAKES

NEW GOLFCOURSE

SCOUT ISLAND

COUTURIE FOREST

RUNOFF INTO CITY PARK FROM LAKE VISTA

NEIGHBORHOOD

CONSTRUCTED WETLANDS FILTER

AND INFILTRATE POTENTIAL

OVERTOPPING FROM ORLEANS CANAL

ORLEANS CANAL

LAKE BED DREDGED TO INCREASE FLOW AND

STORAGE CAPACITY

NEW OPERABLE WEIRS

ALTERNATE WEIR LOCATION

-4.5’ BELOW SEA LEVEL

-5.5’

-6.5’

-7.5’ TYPICAL WATER LEVEL

NEW WATER CONNECTION

1 foot of storage: 90.99 Acre Feet

2 feet of storage: 263 Acre Feet

3 feet of storage: 540 Acre Feet

4 feet of storage: 982 Acre Feet

SIPHON UNDER ORLEANS CANAL

REDIRECTED FLOW INTO CITY PARK

LAKEVIEW LAKE VISTA

NEW OPERABLE

WEIR

FILTRATION WETLAND

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS CITY PARK

Page 127: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS CITY PARK

Page 128: Waggonner NOLA

Development Axis

2 Natural Area

Dillard University(existing campus)

GE N

T I LLY B O

UL E V A

RD

B OU

L E V AR

D

GE N

T I LLY

DPS #3

1 Campus Axis

3 Canal Access

Dillard Wetland

Dillard University

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS DILLARD WETLAND

Page 129: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Page 130: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Page 131: Waggonner NOLA

140 acres CAPTURED RUNOFF

DIRECT

SECONDARY

745 acres IMPROVED FLOW

PUMP STATION #4

FREN

CH Q

UART

ER

PUMP STATION #3

PUMP STATION #17

PUMP STATION #19

L A K E P O N T C H A R T R A I N

LAKEFRONT PUMP STATION (INTERIM)

LON

DON

AVENU

E CANAL

INDUSTRIAL CAN

AL

BAYO

U ST

. JOH

N

This area drains through two main pipes under Mirabeau and Owens Blvds, which can be diverted into the site

Retention upstream allows drainage in this area to flow more efficiently to Pump Station #4

Reduced volume at Pump Station #4 benefits the entire Gentilly area

2,900 acres INCREASED PUMP CAPACITY

Less water entering the London Avenue Canal at Pump Station #4 makes pumping at Station #3 more effective

LOWERED CANAL WALLS6,115 acres

(London Avenue Canal watershed)

BENEFITS

25 acres RETENTION AND STORAGECSJ + adjacent vacant properties developed into water storage

M I S S I S S I P P I R I V E R

3,785 acres

6,115 acres

TOTAL 9,900 acres

N

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Page 132: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Page 133: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Mirabeau Ave

Owens Blvd

St.

Be

rna

rd A

ve

Ca

rti

er

Ave

Owens

Bvld.

Mirabeau

Ave.

site

groundwater

sand

clay

0’0”

North-South Section

Page 134: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Page 135: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

water storage: 1,327,680 cubic feet

benefit-cost analysis:2.4

DRY

treatment train

rock-lined swales

forebay

pool

intake

DELUGE

intake

intake

detention/infiltration

rain garden

WET

intake

intake

subsurface storage

retention

Page 136: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU WATER GARDENS

Page 137: Waggonner NOLA

AMSTERDAMWESTERPARK

Page 138: Waggonner NOLA

AMSTERDAMWESTERPARK

Page 139: Waggonner NOLA

AMSTERDAMWATERGRAAFSMEER POLDER

Page 140: Waggonner NOLA

YUNNANDALI

Page 141: Waggonner NOLA

LIJIANGSHUHE

Page 142: Waggonner NOLA

JAPANKYOTO

Page 143: Waggonner NOLA

KYOTOGARDEN

Page 144: Waggonner NOLA

KYOTOKOKEDERA MOSS TEMPLE

Page 145: Waggonner NOLA

JAPANKYOTO

Page 146: Waggonner NOLA

KYOTOGARDEN

Page 147: Waggonner NOLA

KYOTORYOAN-JI

Page 148: Waggonner NOLA

TOKYOGARDEN

Page 149: Waggonner NOLA

KANAZAWA STREET

Page 150: Waggonner NOLA

NEW ORLEANS MIRABEAU AVENUE

Page 151: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS RETROFITTING THE GRID

Page 152: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS BLUE-GREEN NETWORK

Page 153: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS BLUE-GREEN NETWORK

Page 154: Waggonner NOLA

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS BLUE-GREEN NETWORK

Page 155: Waggonner NOLA

1 mile

DPS #34,260 CFS

DPS #44,409 CFS

DPS #121,000 CFS

DPS3-S Storage Assignment:

168.5 ac-ft

DPS4 Storage Assignment:

369.2 ac-ft

DPS3-N Storage Assignment:

99.1 ac-ft

DPS12 Storage Assignment:

333.7 ac-ft

Project Reduction:

9%

Project Reduction:

49%

Project Reduction:

28%

Project Reduction:

45%

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS IMPACT ON WATER ASSIGNMENT

Page 156: Waggonner NOLA

Blue CorridorRedevelopment Green Corridor

Living Shoreline

Campus

Community

Adaptation

Green Streets Canal +

Parkland

Reduced Damage from 5 Year Flood:

$20.1 MillionRoad Maintenance Cost ReductionAssociated with Subsidence:

$123.8 MillionIncreased Property Values:

$392.5 MillionBenefit Cost Ratio:

3.6 to 1

Environmental + Social Value:

$5.2 Million

NDRC: NEW ORLEANS BENEFIT COST ANALYSIS

Page 157: Waggonner NOLA

HORIZON INITIATIVE WATER COMMITTEECOMMUNITY

Page 158: Waggonner NOLA

ADVOCACY · COMMUNITY EDUCATION · K-12 EDUCATIONBUILDERS & DESIGNERS · RESEARCH & POLICY

WATERCOLLABORATIVE

APA Louisiana · Bayou Land RC&D · Blue Crab Labs · CDM Smith · City of New Orleans DPW · City Park · City Porch RealtyCommittee for a Better New Orleans · Common Ground Relief · Concordia · Cry You One · CSED · Dana Brown and AssociatesDisasterMap.net · EcoUrban · Energy Wise Alliance · Evans + Lighter · Feldmeier Galyean · Friends of Lafitte Corridor · Future Proof · Global Green USA · GNO Inc. · Greater New Orleans Foundation · Green Light New Orleans · Groundwork New OrleansGulf Restoration Network · Hike for Katreena · Hollygrove Greenline · Historic Treme Faubourg Treme · Horizon Initiative · Imago Collective · KIPP Central City School · KSI Environmental Consultants · Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation · Land Trust for Louisiana · LEAAF · Levees.org · Life City · Longue Vue House and Gardens · Louisiana Economic Development · LSU Coastal Sustainability Studio · National Wildlife Foundation · Neighborhood Partnership Network · NEWCITY · New Orleans Food & Farm Network · Nola Bamboo · NOMAR Green Committee · Nunez Community College · WWNO NPR · Parkway Bakery & TavernParkway Partners · RIDE New Orleans · Regional Planning Commission · Sankofa · Sewerage & Water Board · Sierra Club Spackman Mossop Michaels · Thomas Strategies LLC · Tulane City Center · Tulane Institute on Water Resources Law and Policy UNO Pontchartrain Institute of Environmental Sciences · UNO Transportation Institute · Urban Conservancy · Urban Institute US Green Building Council Louisiana · Waggonner & Ball · Waldemar S. Nelson · Water Works · Villavaso & Associates

Page 159: Waggonner NOLA

RippleEff ectKick-Off WorkshopAugust 9-10, 2014

Claire [email protected](704) 651-9425

Aron [email protected] (949) 981-9159

4 Introduction

5 Schedule for the Year

6-7 Readings and Questions

8-13 Education/Water/Design

14-15 Workshop Agenda

16-17 Updated Team Profi les

Readings Attached

4

Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans

At the core of our project is a three-part collaboration between teachers, design experts and water experts.

- Teachers contribute knowledge of curriculum design and implementation.

- Design professionals and educators contribute knowledge of visual, hands-on, and experiential learning.

- Water experts contribute content expertise in international and local water issues.

During the kick-off workshop, we will begin to learn from each other through discussion, design exercises, and time in the fi eld looking at the water that is all around us.

Introduction

RIPPLE EFFECTSEWERAGE & WATER BOARD GRANT

Page 160: Waggonner NOLA

RIPPLE EFFECTSEWERAGE & WATER BOARD GRANT

Page 161: Waggonner NOLA

ENGAGEMENT NEXT GENERATION

Page 162: Waggonner NOLA
Page 163: Waggonner NOLA
Page 164: Waggonner NOLA

livingwithwater.com