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New York Ardsley Middle School Rain Garden - Village of Ardsley

The document discusses the installation of a demonstration raingarden in the Village of Ardsley to help manage stormwater runoff. Raingardens are shallow planted beds that collect runoff from roofs and properties allowing water to sink into the ground rather than washing into storm drains. The village installed a 10 foot by 7 foot raingarden on village property with perennial plants. It was excavated to a depth of 8 inches and includes a berm to retain water and grass planted on the berm. The raingarden aims to help clean local waters as part of the EPA Stormwater Management Program.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views2 pages

New York Ardsley Middle School Rain Garden - Village of Ardsley

The document discusses the installation of a demonstration raingarden in the Village of Ardsley to help manage stormwater runoff. Raingardens are shallow planted beds that collect runoff from roofs and properties allowing water to sink into the ground rather than washing into storm drains. The village installed a 10 foot by 7 foot raingarden on village property with perennial plants. It was excavated to a depth of 8 inches and includes a berm to retain water and grass planted on the berm. The raingarden aims to help clean local waters as part of the EPA Stormwater Management Program.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Village of Ardsley Phase II Stormwater Management Raingarden Project

The EPA Stormwater Management Program aims to clean up the waters of the US. We can all help by trying to keep more water on our property so it gets a chance to sink back into the ground instead of washing over the street and into the storm drain. One way to collect runoff is with a raingarden. Raingardens are level planting beds, about 4 to 8 inches deep, which collect runoff. They should be at least 10 feet from the foundation of the house, preferably on a shallow slope. You can direct your downspouts to drain into them. There is a terrific manual with details at http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/water/wm/dsfm/shore/documents/rgmanual.pdf We installed a small (10 ft width X 7 ft length) demonstration raingarden at AMS. It is located on MacCormack Drive on the west side of the entrance. (See picture below)

We excavated the planting bed to a depth of 8 inches and leveled it as needed with additional soil. Excavated soil was used to create a berm at the lower edge (east side in our garden) and grass seed was planted on the berm to stabilize it. (See diagram below)

The bed is an irregular shape filled with a variety of perennial plants (except Verbena which is an annual). (See diagram below)

E C N I K J
A B C D E F G Aster Bottlebrush sedge Joe Pye weed Helenium Viola Gayfeather Cardinal flower H I J K L M N Blue Lobelia Verbena Phlox Lavender Echinacea Solidago Daisies

A B K H E F

G I M L N

Village of Ardsley Phase II Stormwater Management thanks Cub Scout Pack #3 and the Hobbs, Leib-Geiger, Lyons, Palij, Shlom and Yee families for their hard work and extra effort in installing our Village Rain Garden.

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