Kleist, ChrisBrady, ValerieJohnson, Lucinda BSchomberg, Jesse2017-08-092017-08-092011-07-30https://hdl.handle.net/11299/189223Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Contract Number: B10575This item is a duplicate of another record with the same title (http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187317).We used paired 2‐block street sections in the Amity Creek watershed (Duluth, MN) to demonstrate the effectiveness of homeowner BMPs to reduce residential stormwater flow to storm sewers in an older neighborhood in a cold climate on clay and bedrock geology. Runoff from each street was measured before and after installation of stormwater BMPs. In addition, the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of residents were measured before and after BMP installation. BMPs were installed on properties of willing residents of one street (“treatment”). Most residents (22 of 25 properties) willingly participated. 250 trees and shrubs were planted; 22 rain barrels were installed; 5 rain gardens, 12 rock‐sump storage basins, and 2 swales were constructed; and a stormwater ditch was re‐dug and had 5 ditch checks installed in it. The post‐project survey indicated an increase in understanding by treatment‐street residents of where stormwater flowed to and what it affected, and an increase in willingness to accept at least some responsibility for stormwater runoff. Residents who received BMPs were generally satisfied with them and would recommend them to others. Runoff reduction proved more difficult to quantify due to high and inconsistent runoff variability between the paired streets, very few pre‐BMP installation rain events, and loss of one control street due to re‐paving mid‐project. Capacity of installed BMPs is approximately 2.5% of the measured stormwater runoff. There is about a 20% greater reduction in runoff for the treatment street after BMPs were installed than for the control street for small to moderate storm events; while we would like to attribute this completely to our BMPs, we cannot prove that other factors weren’t also at work. Peak flows also appear to have been reduced for 1 inch and smaller rainstorms, but we were unable to accurately measure this reduction. The results are available on an existing stream education website and are used to educate neighborhood, city of Duluth, and regional residents on stormwater issues, individual responsibility, and BMP options.enTaking Stock - Topical CategoriesTaking Stock - Social ConstructsTaking Stock - WatershedsTaking Stock - Water QualityTaking Stock - StormwaterTaking Stock - Programs & ProjectsTaking Stock - Floods/FloodingTaking Stock - Civic EngagementTaking Stock - ResponsibilityTaking Stock - Preferences (for information, learning, etc.)Taking Stock - Practices & BehaviorsTaking Stock - MotivationTaking Stock - Knowledge & AwarenessTaking Stock - IncentivesTaking Stock - Constraints and BarriersTaking Stock - Attitudes and OpinionsTaking Stock - Adoption of BMPsNRRI Technical Reports - Water and the EnvironmentAmity CreekDuluth, MinnesotaStormwaterDuluth Residential Stormwater Reduction Demonstration Project for Lake Superior TributariesTechnical Report