LID techniques have been employed by various municipalities nationwide, and worldwide, and have been shown to be effective and feasible methods of preventing urban development impacts to receiving waters. In many cases the cost of low impact development is lower than traditional development, both in terms of construction costs and maintenance costs. Because LID techniques are effective, feasible and economically practicable, they meet the MEP definition.
Below are some useful LID resources:
Brochures:
A 4-page flyer published by a group of State agencies that describes LID, the benefits and challenges and economic issues (no permission needed for reproduction):
http://www.coastal.ca.gov/nps/lid-factsheet.pdf
A 4-page flyer published by a group of State agencies that describes the impacts of urbanization on water quality and quantity (no permission needed for reproduction):
http://www.coastal.ca.gov/nps/watercyclefacts.pdf
Informational resources:
Basic Introduction to LID:
http://www.lid-stormwater.net/intro/background.htm
LID Literature Review by the USEPA:
http://www.epa.gov/owow/nps/lid/lid.pdf
Salinas Development Standards Manual
An LID Design manual which contains a description of LID, how to apply LID at all levels of project planning, LID schematics, design standards, pros and cons and maintenance techniques.
BMPs:
A rain garden is a shallow depression, planted with native plants, designed to slow, capture, and infiltrate rain. Rain gardens can be small, formal, home-owner style gardens, large complex bioretention gardens, or anywhere in between.
Rain Garden designs: http://www.raingardens.org/Index.php
http://www.rainkc.com/GARDENS/INDEX.ASP
Rain Garden economics:
http://www.rainkc.com/home/index.asp
LID Projects
Florence Street LID Retrofit - This project converts a standard street-gutter-sidewalk into an LID bioswale-lined street. The project will improve bike and pedestrian safety, current parking constraints, and stormwater runoff and water quality. The project is located in Templeton, CA.
Workshop Materials:
Materials from the Central Coast Water Board’s Low Impact Development Workshop (November 18, 2005)
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The following is a list of some of the LID trainings occurring through out the state. Follow the links below for more information:
UC Davis Extension
There are several LID workshops between now and the end of February
from San Diego to Mendocino - For more information for more
information about these workshops please visit the Center for Water
and Land Use website at http://extension.ucdavis.edu/cwlu
In addition there will be a series of LID workshops that the CWLU is
co-sponsoring with the California Coastal Commission and others in
April. Their will be at least 4, perhaps 5, workshops in this series
and will occur all along the California coast in a five day time
frame. Details will be posted on the CWLU website as soon as they
become available.
California StormwaterQuality Association (CASQA) 2008 Conference
September 2008
http://stormwaterconference.com/
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