header_resources
 
Learn
Info You Can Use
Video & Voice
Promotional Tools
Exhibits & Demos
Classroom Curriculum
Student Projects
Directory of Contacts
External Links

 

Join the Cause & Become a Partner button

HARD SURFACES


<< BACK TO PREVIOUS HARD SURFACES PAGE

Apple Valley aerial

As landscapes develop into cities, they become "harder" with more of the ground covered by roads, parking lots, and buildings. This is an aerial photo of Apple Valley at Highways 77 & 42.

Source: Dakota Soil and Water Conservation District

(cont.) Hard surfaces such as streets, parking lots and roofs are called impervious surfaces — surfaces that water cannot pass through. Think of plastic wrap. Covering a landscape with impervious surfaces is like wrapping it in plastic — water cannot soak in, so must run off. This shift from soaking in to running off is at the center of water-quality problems cities experience.

Rivers and lakes are supplied with water in one of two ways: by water running off the surface of the ground, or by water seeping through it. Of the two, they are healthier when supplied by water seeping through the ground. Water seeping through the ground, or groundwater, runs cool, clean, steady and slow. In contrast, water running off the surface of the ground behaves entirely differently. It flows fast, warm in the summer, and dirty — carrying stormwater pollutants it picks up along the way.

Not surprisingly, rivers supplied mainly by surface runoff have health issues! Instead of having a steady flow throughout the seasons, they tend to behave erratically, running fast and full — sometimes flooding — when it is raining, and then going down to trickle when it is not. They also are dirtier, having to deal with stormwater pollutants that runoff water picks up along its way.

Because of the increased amounts of runoff coming from hard surfaces, flooding of city streets and neighborhoods would be common if it were not for storm sewers. Like a drain in a bathtub, storm drains in street curbs catch runoff water and take it by underground pipe to nearby rivers, lakes and wetlands. This solves the problem of flooded streets, but causes problems in the water bodies runoff goes to, by delivering too much water that is moving too fast and is too full of pollutants.

Movie icon Streams to Streams:
WMV | MOV

Watch this video for a better understanding of water-quality problems in cities. Learn about the causes and find possible solutions.

If you are on a slower Internet connection, you can request this video as part of the "Water Down the Drain" CD-ROM from the Center for Global Environmental Protection at Hamline University.

From "Water Down the Drain" education CD-ROM, © Center for Global Environmental Education, Hamline University. Request a CD-ROM

Whether called hard surfaces or impervious surfaces, streets, parking lots and buildings are at the center of water-quality problems in cities. As the amount of hard surfaces increases in a city, the amount of water-quality problems increases too. It is not surprising that efforts to improve water quality in cities often involve reducing hard surfaces, and creating "soft" areas where rain and snow runoff can be caught and soaked into the ground.

©2007 Metro Watershed Partners. All rights reserved. | Contact Us | Terms of Use & Privacy Policy