A Strategic Sewer Separation and Green Infrastructure Solution for Omaha
The fresh water in the lagoon sparkles in the sunlight. It’s stocked for fishing and rimmed by trails, gathering spaces, and native wetland plants. Inconspicuously, it’s also ready to receive and store excess stormwater. Planned and designed by Black & Veatch, the stormwater lagoon at Fontenelle Park in northeast Omaha is natural infrastructure and an invaluable piece of the city’s strategy to protect Missouri River water quality and enhance the lagoon’s use.
As in hundreds of cities across the United States, older parts of Omaha have a combined sewer system that collects stormwater and sewage together and conveys it in a single system to a facility for treatment. The problem is that significant wet weather events can overwhelm the combined system’s capacity, causing streets to flood, sewage to back up into homes, and untreated wastewater with stormwater to overflow directly into streams, rivers, and other water bodies. Under a State Administrative Order to reduce its combined sewer overflows (CSOs), the City of Omaha implemented the Lake James to Fontenelle Park Sewer Separation and Green Infrastructure Project as a major component of its long-term CSO control plan.
The city acquired the land for Fontenelle Park in the late 1800s. Prior to the project, the park’s low-lying lagoon collected local runoff and stormwater via a few street inlets. As envisioned by Black & Veatch, the project expanded and deepened the lagoon, creating 29 acre-feet of storage to take on excess stormwater during wet weather events.