An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa

Stormwater pollution has been recognised as a leading cause of ecological degradation of urban streams. Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS) attempt to address stormwater impacts by flow attenuation and pollutant treatment, simultaneously providing amenities such as water for use in irrigation or oth...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schieritz, René
Other Authors: Winter, Kevin
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22884
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-228842020-10-06T05:11:29Z An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa Schieritz, René Winter, Kevin Environment and Geographical Sciences Stormwater pollution has been recognised as a leading cause of ecological degradation of urban streams. Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS) attempt to address stormwater impacts by flow attenuation and pollutant treatment, simultaneously providing amenities such as water for use in irrigation or other suitable uses. Permeable pavements are a form of SuDS that provide on-source treatment and storage of stormwater while retaining the functionality of hardened surfaces. They have been studied extensively in the international literature but no studies in a South African context have been published. This study investigated the water quality performance of a recently constructed permeable pavement at the University of Cape Town. Effluent quality was assessed against the South African Water Quality Guidelines and an ecosystem assessment tool. The results showed that, while the pavement had been constructed with unwashed aggregate and therefore exported suspended solids, effluent still met the standards required for irrigation and some industrial uses. However, the effluent did not meet desirable nutrient standards for discharge into the aquatic ecosystem. The performance of the pavement was similar to values reported in the international literature, suggesting that the quality ranges can be extrapolated to other permeable pavements. The newly constructed pavement displayed noteworthy inter-event progression, as well as identifiable intra-event variation of pollutant concentrations. Further research into effluent toxicity, long-term impacts of unwashed aggregate and catchment-wide impacts of permeable pavements are recommended. 2017-01-23T07:44:59Z 2017-01-23T07:44:59Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22884 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Environment and Geographical Sciences
spellingShingle Environment and Geographical Sciences
Schieritz, René
An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa
description Stormwater pollution has been recognised as a leading cause of ecological degradation of urban streams. Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS) attempt to address stormwater impacts by flow attenuation and pollutant treatment, simultaneously providing amenities such as water for use in irrigation or other suitable uses. Permeable pavements are a form of SuDS that provide on-source treatment and storage of stormwater while retaining the functionality of hardened surfaces. They have been studied extensively in the international literature but no studies in a South African context have been published. This study investigated the water quality performance of a recently constructed permeable pavement at the University of Cape Town. Effluent quality was assessed against the South African Water Quality Guidelines and an ecosystem assessment tool. The results showed that, while the pavement had been constructed with unwashed aggregate and therefore exported suspended solids, effluent still met the standards required for irrigation and some industrial uses. However, the effluent did not meet desirable nutrient standards for discharge into the aquatic ecosystem. The performance of the pavement was similar to values reported in the international literature, suggesting that the quality ranges can be extrapolated to other permeable pavements. The newly constructed pavement displayed noteworthy inter-event progression, as well as identifiable intra-event variation of pollutant concentrations. Further research into effluent toxicity, long-term impacts of unwashed aggregate and catchment-wide impacts of permeable pavements are recommended.
author2 Winter, Kevin
author_facet Winter, Kevin
Schieritz, René
author Schieritz, René
author_sort Schieritz, René
title An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa
title_short An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa
title_full An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa
title_fullStr An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed An investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in South Africa
title_sort investigation of the treatment efficacy of permeable pavements for water quality performance in south africa
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22884
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