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  • Inlet weir at Reservoir 5, Mount Tabor Park Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Inlet Weir Reservoir 5 Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Stormwater planter weir detail of stormwater management facilities, Director Park, Portland, Oregon.
    Stormwater Planter Weir.jpg
  • Stormwater Planter and weir detail of stormwater management facilities, Director Park, Portland, Oregon.
    Stormwater Planter V-notch.jpg
  • Stormwater planter overflow weir detail of stormwater facilities, PSU Urban Plaza, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon.
    Stormwater Planter Overflow.jpg
  • Effective stormwater management in a dense urban area.  Swales and stormwater planters collect stormwater from roof downspouts, parking lot and street.  Appropriate vegetation filters out pollutants in the stormwater before it soaks into the ground, naturally recharging groundwater.  RiverEast Center Stormwater Management facility - a public-private stormwater management partnership (PPP) in Portland, Oregon.
    Roof-Downspout-and-Weir.jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Weir-Stormwater-Curb-Extension.jpg
  • Landscaped stormwater planter strip manages rain water from the "first flush" during a rainfall event.  Stormwater has filled the first chamber and is overtopping a weir and filling the second chamber.  Green streets collect stormwater runoff and route it through facilities like this planter where vegetation and soils filter pollutants before allowing water to soak into the ground.  These facilities replenish groundwater and enhance neighborhood green spaces.  Green streets require routine cleaning and maintenance.  This facility is on NE 47th Avenue at NE Davis Street in Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-Stormwater-Planter.jpg
  • Landscaped stormwater planter strip manages rain water from the "first flush" during a rainfall event.  Stormwater has filled the first chamber and is overtopping a weir and filling the second chamber.  Green streets collect stormwater runoff and route it through facilities like this planter where vegetation and soils filter pollutants before allowing water to soak into the ground.  These facilities replenish groundwater and enhance neighborhood green spaces.  Green streets require routine cleaning and maintenance.  This facility is on NE 47th Avenue at NE Davis Street in Portland, Oregon.
    Storm-Water-Planter-First-Flush.jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street on a slope (weirs).  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  East Burnside Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Stormwater-Curb-Extension-Storm.jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-Weir-NW-21st-Ave-East.jpg
  • Rain garden manages stormwater runoff at Mt Tabor Middle School.  Partnership of the school, Portland Public Schools and Environmental Services built the rain garden to reduce storm flows to the public sewer line.  Sediments and pollutants are removed before the water gradually soaks into the ground.  A 10-year maintenance agreement has been signed.
    Rain-Garden-Flow-Control-Weir.jpg
  • Dosing House and Gatehouse 5 at Reservoir 5, one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. Mount Tabor Park,Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Dosing House and Gatehouse 5 Mt Tabo...jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 and reflections on Reservoir 5, with the City of Portland beyond.  This is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park, and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them.
    Portland Beyond Reservoir 5 Mt Tabor...jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-NW-21st-Ave-East.jpg
  • Effective stormwater management in a dense urban area.  Swales and stormwater planters collect stormwater from roof downspouts, parking lot and street.  Appropriate vegetation filters out pollutants in the stormwater before it soaks into the ground, naturally recharging groundwater.  RiverEast Center Stormwater Management facility - a public-private stormwater management partnership (PPP) in Portland, Oregon.
    Swale-and-Jogger-in-Rain.jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-NW-21st-Ave-West.jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-Planter-Fescue-BW.jpg
  • Effective stormwater management in a dense urban area.  Swales and stormwater planters collect stormwater from roof downspouts, parking lot and street.  Appropriate vegetation filters out pollutants in the stormwater before it soaks into the ground, naturally recharging groundwater.  RiverEast Center Stormwater Management facility - a public-private stormwater management partnership (PPP) in Portland, Oregon.
    Swale-Jogger-and-Public-Path.jpg
  • Effective stormwater management in a dense urban area.  Swales and stormwater planters collect stormwater from roof downspouts, parking lot and street.  Appropriate vegetation filters out pollutants in the stormwater before it soaks into the ground, naturally recharging groundwater.  RiverEast Center Stormwater Management facility - a public-private stormwater management partnership (PPP) in Portland, Oregon.
    Parking-Lot-Stormwater-Swale.jpg
  • A stormwater curb extension retrofit to an existing street.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-Portland.jpg
  • Vegetation in this stormwater curb extension filters out pollutants in the stormwater before it soaks into the ground, naturally recharging groundwater.  Stormwater management facilities like this one are are also known as Green Street treatments.  NW 21st Avenue and Raleigh Street, Portland, Oregon.
    Green-Street-Planter-Grasses.jpg
  • Rounded river pebbles are used in swales and stormwater planters to protect filter media from erosive flow velocities.
    Rain-Garden-Detail-Pebbles.jpg
  • A public-private stormwater management partnership (PPP) - the first of its kind in Portland.  Runoff from the public street flows into a treatment swale on private property, where vegetation filters out pollutants before it soaks into the ground, naturally recharging groundwater.  RiverEast Center Stormwater Management facility in Portland, Oregon.
    Public-Private-Partnership-Stormwate...jpg
  • Dosing House at Reservoir 1, one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Dosing House 1 Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Stormwater management facility in Tualatin, Oregon, adjacent to the Kaiser Permanente Clinic at 19185 Southwest 90th Avenue.  The facility discharges to the wetlands of the Hedges Creek Marsh, a tributary of the Tualatin River.
    Stormwater-Management-Facility-4.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at dusk, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH-08a-August-2015-Mount-Tabor-Park...jpg
  • Stormwater management facility in Tualatin, Oregon, adjacent to the Kaiser Permanente Clinic at 19185 Southwest 90th Avenue.  The facility discharges to the wetlands of the Hedges Creek Marsh, a tributary of the Tualatin River.
    Stormwater-Management-Facility-1.jpg
  • Stormwater management facility in Tualatin, Oregon, adjacent to the Kaiser Permanente Clinic at 19185 Southwest 90th Avenue.  The facility discharges to the wetlands of the Hedges Creek Marsh, a tributary of the Tualatin River.
    Stormwater-Management-Facility-3.jpg
  • Stormwater management facility in Tualatin, Oregon, adjacent to the Kaiser Permanente Clinic at 19185 Southwest 90th Avenue.  The facility discharges to the wetlands of the Hedges Creek Marsh, a tributary of the Tualatin River.
    Stormwater-Management-Facility-2.jpg
  • Gatehouse 1 and Dosing House at Reservoir 1, one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Gatehouse 1 Dosing House Mt Tabor Pa...jpg
  • Reservoir 5 inlet weir from the dosing house, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH-08b-August-2015-Mount-Tabor-Park...jpg
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