Surprisingly, the neighborhood of Forest Hills, located less than seven miles from downtown Washington, DC, is aptly named. Bounded by Rock Creek Park to the East, the community boasts wooded slopes, expansive lots, and many open spaces.
When the District Department of the Environment wanted to restore a degraded perennial stream near one such open space, they turned to Biohabitats for help. The stream, which was fed from a storm sewer outfall that had become stressed over the decades by increasing development, was so eroded that it exposed a sewer line and became a safety hazard. The channel, which was contributing large amounts of sediment downstream, was virtually lifeless, save for a riparian understory filled with invasive species.
Biohabitats applied a regenerative stormwater conveyance approach, a stream restoration technique that reconnects a tributary with its floodplain and converts a problem (stormwater) into a resource (groundwater) through infiltration. The design features a “bubbler” device that slowly “leaks” groundwater and storm flows into the restored stream valley which includes a series of cascades, riffles, and shallow pools, as well as native riparian vegetation. The project, which was constructed within a three-month period with minimal disturbance to the riparian forest not only improved stormwater management in this highly urban region, but added habitat, beauty, recreational opportunities, and safety to what is now an inviting park for the Forest Hills community.
Owner: Sustainable DC
Bioregion: Chesapeake/Delaware Bays
Physiographic province: Piedmont
Watershed: Rock Creek
Collaborators: Underwood and Associates, Stantec