| Solving Storm Water Challenges: Groesbeck Municipal Golf Course |
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By Denny Spencer and Jerry Mathews, ASGCA Solving Storm Water Challenges Prior to the Clean Water Act of 1972, it was common practice for cities and towns to install only one drainage pipe in the ground to carry both sewer and storm water to a waste water treatment plant. The plant would treat the water and release it to a nearby river. As the cities and towns grew, treatment plants could not handle the influx of water after a heavy rain and much of it, sewage and all, was discharged directly into the waterway. Amendments to the Clean Water Act in 1987 included a mandate that states must reduce the amount of pollution and sewage being released into rivers. The City of The Tollgate Drainage District of Lansing Township encompasses a watershed of 234 acres, 550 residential homes, 10 commercial properties, 500 plus apartment units, and four governmental agencies. On its western edge sits the Groesbeck Municipal Golf Course and The Ingham County Drain Commission was faced with the traditional solution of piping The City of The challenge presented to the golf course architects was to redesign the new golf holes to include the ponds and wetlands required by the Drain Commission without requiring any additional land. The design goal was also to maintain the playability and safety that is required of municipal golf. The new water features affected six of the nine holes, bordering three (No. 1, 8, 9), providing the backdrop at No. 2 and calling for a tee shot carry at No. 3 and No. 7. At No. 8, a 185 yard par 3, a new perched wetland was created that borders the entire left side of the hole. An aquatic plant specialist was consulted for the addition of a wide variety of wetland plantings. A recirculating pump brings water up to the wetland, which is eventually distributed, into a rock creek at the front of the green and then back into the pond. In addition to beautiful and strategic water features, the pond construction provided nearly 90,000 cubic yards of soil for building new tee and green complexes and a large amount of fairway elevation and mounding. The fairways on No. 1 and No. 9 were raised four feet to provide additional storm water storage during an unusually heavy storm. The ponds themselves provide a number of environmental advantages in addition to storm water storage. A combination of wetlands, waterfalls, underwater aerification and select deep water areas all contribute to sedimentation control and pollution reduction. The ponding system also relies on evaporation to reduce its volume, as well as providing a source of irrigation water for all 18-holes. Along with new double row irrigation, the Golf Course Architect worked with the irrigation consultant to design an underground recirculating system which exchanges the water in the ponds every 24 hours. The HDPE pipe, with holes drilled in its top, was installed along the bottom of the wetland ponds. It not only recirculates the water throughout the entire water management system, but it also continuously pushes water from the lower depths to the surface. The total 30 acre urban wetland system, including the golf course, can handle 10 million gallons of water per day, or two 25 year storms back-to-back. More importantly, the water is naturally filtered and cleansed so that no pollutants are being discharged into the river, solving a complex environmental problem. The entire project was done for $6.2 million, less than one-third of the cost of the traditional solution, with the golf course renovation representing less than $2.5 million of the project total. Groesbeck Municipal Golf Course, which previously had no water features, can now boast about its new nine with six beautiful and challenging water holes. Its new environment is also teaming with numerous species of fish, waterfowl, shore birds and other forms of amphibian wildlife. Summary Heavy rains in |


