Accessibility Tools

  • Increase text
  • Decrease text
  • High contrast
  • Negative contrast
  • Add grayscale
  • Remove grayscale
  • Add lightbackground
  • Remove lightbackground
  • Reset
Created on LEED Interpretation

ID#

li-2298

Credit NameSSc6.2 - Stormwater design - quality control
Credit CategorySustainable sites
International ApplicableYes

Rating System

LEED BD+C: New Construction, LEED BD+C: Schools, LEED BD+C: Core and Shell

Rating System Version

v2 - LEED 2.2, v2 - Schools 2007, v2 - LEED 2.0

Inquiry

Our project uses an innovative green roof design to eliminate water pollution, increase infiltration, eliminate source contaminates, and treat the building\'s stormwater. In our efforts to treat as much roof runoff for quality as possible, we have redirected the runoff from the impervious roof area towards the pervious (green roof) area allowing the runoff to infiltrate, collect into under-drain pipes, and eventually become overflow collected within the area drains. This will reduce or eliminate pollutant loadings by allowing the stormwater runoff to first filter into the soil and vegetation. This stormwater design is a non-structural, alternative surface with innovative methods in a densely populated downtown area. We have disconnected the impervious rooftop areas (a strategy recognized by the state of Maryland) to infiltrate its runoff and treat for TSS. This design will greatly reduce the release of TSS into the municipal water system. The green roof covers more than half of the roof surface and treats 100% of the stormwater that falls on this portion of the roof. The entire roof area is 25,525 SF, of which the cooling tower area is 1,200 SF, and the green roof area is 13,046 SF. The cooling tower drainage area will be the only remaining impervious area that has not been directed towards a green roof area - this constitutes less than 5% of the entire roof. In view of the fact that 90% of the annual rainfall volume will be 100% TSS treated, we would like to submit a credit interpretation request to consider the impervious rooftop runoff that drains towards the green roof area, as "green roof runoff." We feel that the disconnection strategy used for the impervious rooftop areas makes it appropriate to calculate the redirected impervious area as pervious.

Logging out the application..