The low impact development practices, like those provided in
the BMP manual shall be utilized for all regulated activities to the
maximum extent practicable. Water volume controls shall be implemented
using the Design Storm Method in Subsection A or the Simplified Method
in Subsection B. For regulated activity areas equal or less than one
acre that do not require hydrologic routing to design the stormwater
facilities, this chapter establishes no preference for either methodology;
therefore, the applicant may select either methodology on the basis
of economic considerations, the intrinsic limitations on applicability
of the analytical procedures associated with each methodology, and
other factors.
A. The Design Storm Method (CG-1 in the BMP manual) is applicable to
any size of regulated activity. This method requires detailed modeling
based on site conditions.
(1) Do not increase the post-development total runoff volume for all
storms equal to or less than the two-year twenty-four-hour duration
precipitation.
(2) For hydrologic modeling purposes:
(a)
Existing predevelopment nonforested pervious areas must be considered
meadow or its equivalent in good condition.
(b)
Existing (predevelopment) impervious areas, when present, must
consider 20% of the impervious area as meadow in good condition.
B. The Simplified Method (CG-2 in the BMP manual) is independent of
site conditions and should be used if the Design Storm Method is not
followed. This method is not applicable to regulated activities greater
than one acre or for projects that require design of stormwater storage
facilities. For new impervious surfaces:
(1) Stormwater facilities shall capture at least the first two inches
of runoff from all new impervious surfaces.
(2) At least the first one inch of runoff from new impervious surfaces
shall be permanently removed from the runoff flow; i.e., it shall
not be released into the surface waters of this commonwealth. Removal
options include reuse, evaporation, transpiration, and infiltration.
(3) Wherever possible, infiltration facilities should be designed to
accommodate infiltration of the entire permanently removed runoff;
however, in all cases at least the first 0.5 inch of the permanently
removed runoff should be infiltrated.
(4) This method is exempt from the requirements of §
358-14, Rate controls.
Post-development peak discharge rates shall not exceed the predevelopment
peak discharge rates for the, two-, ten-, twenty-five-, and 100-year-storm
events.
Stormwater runoff from all development sites shall be calculated
using either the Rational Method (stormwater conveyance systems only)
or a soil cover complex methodology as follows:
A. Major and minor conveyance systems up to 20 acres may be designed
using the Rational Method. The Rational Method may also be used in
sizing the minor conveyance systems for larger sites. Any stormwater
runoff calculations involving drainage areas greater than 20 acres,
including on-site and off-site areas, shall use a generally accepted
runoff hydrograph technique that is based on the NRCS Soil Cover Complex
Method. Runoff hydrograph methods must be used for major drainage
system designs for all systems with greater than 20 acres of drainage
area and for design of all stormwater storage facilities.
B. All calculations consistent with this chapter using the Soil Cover Complex Method shall use the appropriate design rainfall depths for the various return period storms presented §
358-11, General requirements, Subsection
L. If a hydrologic computer model is used for stormwater runoff calculations, the duration of rainfall shall be 24 hours. The SCS Rainfall Type II curve shall be used for the rainfall distribution.
C. For the purposes of existing predevelopment runoff rate determination,
undeveloped nonforested pervious areas, including disturbed areas,
must be considered meadow in good condition, or its equivalent in
good condition. Those areas that have existing impervious areas within
the planned development area may be included in the determination
of the predevelopment flow rate.
D. All calculations using the Rational Method shall use rainfall intensities
from the Precipitation-Frequency Atlas of the United States, Atlas
14, Volume 2, Version 3.0, U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Weather Service, Hydrometeorological
Design Studies Center, Silver Spring, Maryland. NOAA's Atlas
14 can be accessed at: http://hdsc.nws.noaa.gov/hdsc/pfds/.
E. Times-of-concentration for overland flow shall be calculated using
the methodology presented in Chapter 3 of Urban Hydrology for Small
Watersheds, NRCS, TR-55. Travel time for channel and pipe flow shall
be computed using velocities determined using Manning's equation.
F. Runoff curve numbers (CN) for both existing (predevelopment) and
proposed (post-development) conditions to be used in the Soil Cover
Complex Method shall be obtained from Chapter 2 of Urban Hydrology
for Small Watersheds, NRCS, TR-55.
G. Runoff coefficients (C) for both existing (predevelopment) and proposed
(post-development) conditions for use in the Rational Method shall
be:
Runoff Factors for the Rational Equation
|
---|
|
Runoff Factor "C"
|
---|
Type of Drainage Area or Surface
|
Minimum
|
Maximum
|
---|
Pavement, concrete or bituminous concrete
|
0.75
|
0.95
|
Pavement, bituminous macadam or surface-treated gravel
|
0.65
|
0.80
|
Pavement, gravel, macadam, etc.
|
0.25
|
0.60
|
Sandy soil, cultivated or light growth
|
0.15
|
0.30
|
Sandy soil, woods or heavy brush
|
0.15
|
0.30
|
Gravel, bare or light growth
|
0.20
|
0.40
|
Gravel, woods or heavy brush
|
0.15
|
0.35
|
Clay soil, bare or light growth
|
0.35
|
0.75
|
Clay soil, woods or heavy growth
|
0.25
|
0.60
|
City business sections
|
0.60
|
0.80
|
Dense residential sections
|
0.50
|
0.70
|
Suburban, normal residential areas
|
0.35
|
0.60
|
Rural areas, parks, golf courses
|
0.15
|
0.30
|
Runoff Coefficient for Rural Watersheds
|
---|
|
Slope
|
---|
|
Extreme
|
High
|
Normal
|
Low
|
---|
Relief (Cr)
|
0.28-0.35 steep, rugged terrain with average slopes above 30%
|
0.20-0.28 hilly, with average slopes of 10-30%
|
0.14-0.20 rolling, with average slopes of 5-10%
|
0.08-0.14 relatively flat land, with average slopes of 0-5%
|
Soil Infiltration (Ci)
|
0.12-0.16 no effective soil cover, either rock or thin soil
mangle of negligible infiltration capacity
|
0.08-0.12 slow to take up water, clay or shallow loam soils
of low infiltration capacity or poorly drained
|
0.06-0.08 normal; well drained light or medium textured soils,
sandy loams
|
0.04-0.06 deep sand or other soil that takes up water readily,
very light well drained soils
|
Vegetative Cover (Cv)
|
0.12-0.16 no effective plant cover, bare or very sparse cover
|
0.08-0.12 poor to fair; clean cultivation, crops or poor natural
cover, less than 20% of drainage area over good cover
|
0.06-0.08 fair to good; about 50% of area in good grassland
or woodland, not more than 50% of area in cultivated crops
|
0.04-0.06 good to excellent; about 90% of drainage area in good
grassland, woodland, or equivalent cover
|
Surface (Cs)
|
0.10-0.12 negligible; surface depression few and shallow; drainageways
steep and small; no marshes
|
0.08-0.10 well defined system of small drainageways; no ponds
or marshes
|
0.06-0.08 normal; considerable surface depression storage lakes
and ponds and marshes
|
0.04-0.06 much surface storage, drainage system not sharply
defined; large floodplain storage or large number of ponds or marshes
|
The total runoff coefficient based on the four runoff components
is:
C = Cr + Ci + Cv + Cs
|
as obtained from Pub. 584, PennDOT Drainage Manual, Sections
7.5.c thru 7.5.g. Where uniform flow is anticipated, the Manning equation
shall be used for hydraulic computations such as the capacity of open
channels, pipes, and storm sewers. Values for Manning's roughness
coefficient (n) shall be consistent with Pub. 584, PennDOT Drainage
Manual Section 7.3.
|
H. Outlet structures for stormwater storage facilities shall be designed
to meet the performance standards of this chapter using any generally
accepted hydraulic analysis technique or method. Orifices smaller
than three inches diameter are not recommended; however, if the qualified
professional can provide proof that the smaller orifices are protected
from clogging by use of anticlogging devices, then smaller orifices
may be permitted.
I. The design of any stormwater storage facilities intended to meet
the performance standards of this chapter shall be verified by routing
the design storm hydrograph through these facilities.