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A soil survey and hydrologic assessment involving Cleveland vacant lots - implications for stormwater management
Citation:
SHUSTER, W. D. AND B. FURIO. A soil survey and hydrologic assessment involving Cleveland vacant lots - implications for stormwater management. Presented at Reclaiming Vacant Properties Conference, Cleveland, OH, October 13 - 15, 2010.
Impact/Purpose:
To inform
Description:
Our work centered on the possibility of using vacant land mass to infiltrate and otherwise absorb excess stormwater runoff quantity as a sustainable and putatively cost-effective way of managing combined sewer overflows (CSO). County-level, Order 2 soil surveys have been used for decades to illustrate the spatial distribution of soils and communicate the utility and limitations of soil. For the vast majority of these soil surveys, however, there is a distinct lack of resolution of soil series and associated data for urban or highly-developed areas of the US. Yet, with unprecedented vacancy and demolitions in major US cities, the availability of large tracts of open and relatively inexpensive urban land suggests that there are many prospects for using these soils for something other than redevelopment. Therefore, current public interests center on how urban soils may be used to provide a myriad of ecosystem services. Due to the different emphasis, data needs are different than for past soil surveys and therefore we suggest an approach and protocol that was employed in Cleveland OH in 2010. We chose a sample set of 56 vacant lots and 14 city parks or cemeteries that were located in the drainage areas of relatively small-volume, high frequency CSOs. We detail the rationale for this survey approach and how these were surmounted, and detail the methods and level-of effort required as a proposal to the soil survey community for a soil survey protocol aimed at servicing emergent environmental management data needs in urban core areas of the US.