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Resilient Water Infrastructure

Resilient Water Infrastructure. Claire Mortimer Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research. CSC Research findings. Councils asked for; ‘ More specific information on the effect of stormwater run-off from impervious surfaces’

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Resilient Water Infrastructure

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  1. Resilient Water Infrastructure Claire Mortimer Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research

  2. CSC Research findings Councils asked for; • ‘More specific information on the effect of stormwater run-off from impervious surfaces’ • ‘Whole-of-life costs and benefits for swales and stormwater collection ponds’

  3. C-CALM CATCHMENT CONTAMINANT ANNUAL LOADS MODEL Existing Research/tools • Body of research on impacts of stormwater run off (Landcare Research, NIWA) • CostNZ; compares relative life-time costs of various stormwater management devices • C-CALM; sub-catchment based stormwater treatment planning model

  4. Existing research cont. • Low Impact Urban Design and Development (LIUDD) • Working with natural systems and minimizing environmental impacts • Integral to broader urban planning • Social, institutional barriers and enablers to technology adoption

  5. Emerging LIUDD Research • Life Cycle Assessment:What are the lifetime costs of green roofs, walls & street trees? • Multiple Ecosystem Service BenefitsWhat are the full suite of benefits (e.g., water supply, public health, biodiversity, amenity values) delivered under various LIUDD options? • OptimisationWhat are the best device designs to achieve different benefits & outcomes? • Scaling up Cost benefits when we scale up? • MonitoringTo what extent is LIUDD cumulatively being taken up in NZ settlements

  6. Hard & soft research needed for new technologies Technical Quantifying impacts of problem Quantifying benefits of technology; Optimizing design for different benefits Policy Assessing relative life cycle costs of new v conventional technology Alignment to plans, regulations Social Community acceptance; social practices, identity Implementation Common construction mistakes Who maintains decentralized infrastructure? Capacity building of planners, engineers, construction companies LIUDD adoption

  7. Research principles for infrastructure • Integrate physical and social science – design performance and uptake • Research and Council staff working in teams • Resilience/adaptability as a design principle for 21st Century infrastructure • Frame infrastructure within broader dynamic urban system and pursue multiple benefits

  8. Links to research LIUDD some NZ research and tools • Website of 6 year LIUDD research programme www.landcareresearch.co.nz/research/built/liudd/ • Website of LIUDD NZ case studies; their design, policy and implementation http://cs.synergine.com/ • CostNZ web based costing tool for comparing LIUDD stormwater devices with conventional options www.costnz.co.nz/index.aspx • C-CALM Sub catchment integrated stormwater treatment planning model. contact j.moores@niwa.co.nz • How to put nature into our neighborhoods. Urban greening Manual using LIUDD to improve biodiversity outcomes; Landcare Research Science Series No. 35 www.mwpress.co.nz •  Low Impact Urban Design and Development: the big picture; An introduction to the LIUDD principles and methods framework Marjorie van Roon and Henri van Roon. Landcare Research Science Series No. 37 www.mwpress.co.nz • Google link to papers on LIUDD policy and governance and barriers to adoption http://www.google.co.nz/search?q=Heslop+Dixon+LIUDD&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-GB:official&client=firefox-a Climate change social science The CSC report findings indicated councils were looking for ways to communicate science to their communities, the following report provides a New Zealand take on the current state of social and community social knowledge around climate change. • ‘Degrees of Possibility: Igniting Social Knowledge around Climate Change’, http://nzclimatechangecentre.org/sites/nzclimatechangecentre.org/files/images/research/Degrees%20of%20Possibility%20Workshop%20Report%20(NZCCC%20June%202011%20Low%20Res).pdf

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