Friday, May 31, 2013

Madison Valley Stormwater Park

Madison Valley Stormwater Park May 2012

Madison Valley Stormwater Park May 2012 

Madison Valley Stormwater Park May 2012 

Lupine in the Madison Valley Stormwater Park May 2012

 Madison Valley Stormwater Park May 2012

The Madison Valley Stormwater Park, also known as the Phase 1 of the Madison Valley Stormwater Project & the Madison Valley Drainage Basin, is a response to flooding in Madison Valley during times of heavy rain fall.  Tragically, a Madison Valley woman, Kate Fleming, died when a flash flood trapped her inside her basement studio in December 2006.  The nicely landscaped basin makes a very pleasant park.  

From the Seattle Public Utilities website:  The Madison Valley drainage basin in Seattle is an area that is located east of Capitol Hill, west and south of Washington Park, and north of the Central District. Shaped by a glacier and eroded by floods, the valley has steep hillsides and was once drained by a stream that emptied into Union Bay via what is now the University of Washington Arboretum. In the late 1860s, a wagon road was cut through from downtown to Madison Park along the current route of E Madison St. In the 1880s, a cable railway with a trestle across the valley was constructed to provide better access to Madison Park and environs. In the early 1900s, the trestle was replaced with fill, which blocked the natural watercourse, and a combined sewer trunk pipe was built to carry sewage and stormwater under the fill and northward. 

Over the past several decades, there have been a number of instances of flooding in Madison Valley. On August 22, 2004 and December 14, 2006, storm events which hit the city and the Madison Valley neighborhood were especially severe, causing some residents around 30th Ave. E and E John St. to have up to 5 feet of water in their basements and flooding in their backyards. Seattle Public Utilities built an interim stormwater holding area at 30th Ave. E and E John St. which was completed in late December 2006 and holds up to 1 million gallons of stormwater during large rain storms. As the alternatives for the long-term solution were considered, improving stormwater infrastructure on E Madison St. near 29th Ave. E also was an important consideration. Seattle Public Utilities undertook an extensive public involvement effort through the development and selection of the preferred alternative, which was approved for implementation by Seattle City Council and the mayor in June 2008. 

Phase 1 of the Madison Valley Stormwater Project included the expansion of the 1 million gallon above-ground stormwater holding area at 30th Ave. E and E John Street. This facility now has the capacity to hold 1.7 million gallons of stormwater during very large storms. Construction of Phase 1 began in summer 2009 and the expanded stormwater holding area was operational by the end 2009.  Click here for a plan of the park.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Love all the photos. That area looks so pretty and green!
-Jon @ http://rollacity.blogspot.com/2012/05/city-of-rolla-weekend-updates-may-18.html

Landscape Drainage said...

Lovely photos and what a lovely storm water park.