18 Broadway Under Construction
July 28, 2010
DST Eco-Iniative Designed to Deliver Long-term Public Benefit - Kansas City, MO
AN OPPORTUNITY In 2008 this property was vacant, pending further development, when DST Systems had an idea: PLANT GARDENS.
Rain gardens would add beauty to
The concept evolved, embracing an inte-
the site while helping manage storm
grated approach to urban development
water runoff. Other gardens would be
and resource management. 18Broadway
used to grow food for the community’s
demonstrates and tests a wide range of
hungry, and to show people how to
practical solutions for building and living
plant similar gardens at home.
in a healthy environment.
MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 3
DST Eco-Initiative Designed to Deliver Long-term Public Benefit DST “18 Broadway” Project 18 Broadway is a zero-impact, green initiative on a full city block, two blocks south of the Performing Arts Center straddling two urban neighborhoods – the Crossroads and West Side. The Project is a combined living laboratory and demonstration site for 17 green technologies in the Water, Food, Shelter and Energy sectors. Its high-profile location on a major downtown boulevard is an ideal location for achieving maximum exposure of the Project’s primary impact objectives: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Catalyst to stimulate, educate, and test new thinking in applied green technologies Alternative solution to Kansas City’s storm water overflow problem Compatibility of commercial development with environmental stewardship Replicable design for city-wide application City amenity with sustainable economic, social, and environmental benefits
Water – Project designers have devised a state-of-the-art network of rain gardens to integrate with Kansas City’s proposed “10,000 Rain Garden” solution to its Combined Overflow Control Problem. A series of storm water management systems, including rain gardens, purifies and reuses storm water that falls onto the site and is brought into the site from the surrounding streets. Each garden is a discrete eco-system, employing its own unique hydrological and phyto-remediation techniques to capture and purify approximately 1 million gallons of contaminated run-off annually, which represents 1% of the Turkey Creek basin runoff. Purified water is then re-circulated on site to irrigate community gardens and supply fresh water to the site’s future zero-energy townhomes. Food – Community gardens comprise the ½-acre center portion of the Project site and serve as a hub for wholesome community activity. Fresh produce will be made available to local community food centers for families in need. DST is currently in discussions with Harvesters to provide 2 tons of fresh produce annually from 18 Broadway to its food banks. Energy – All requisite electrical energy is generated on site using a combination of solar panels and photo-voltaics to achieve a zero-carbon footprint. Eco-fuel technologies which further diminish greenhouse gas emissions will complete the site’s alternative energy profile and will include the following: electric vehicle charging station using off-peak power from solar panels; charging station for compressed natural gas; Big Belly solar powered trash compactors; and glass recycling center. Shelter – DST is in discussion with KCP&L about new net-zero energy townhomes that will demonstrate how green residential development can be energy self-sufficient and Integrated with conventional urban structures. A commercial building on the block can be used as a part of an integrated platform for making this site a micro-grid showcasing leading-edge energy efficiency strategies, from automated information systems and demand/response to renewable distributed energy that will actually push electric power back onto the electric utility grid. The following pages provide detail of DST’s 18 Broadway Project as developed by Kansas City-based firms 360 Architects, Patti Banks Associates, and TapanAm Associates, Inc. A public-private partnership could replicate this DST Project throughout Kansas City, making our City a model of leading-edge green infrastructure development that delivers long-term benefit to the public and private sectors.
The site slopes diagonally from northwest to northeast. It has a wonderful promontory view from the top corner out over Kansas City’s Crossroads Art District and midtown beyond.
Imagine a block where WATER
FOOD
RUNS CLEAR
IS ABUNDANT
5
SHELTER
IS RESOURCEFUL
14 YOU ARE HERE
14
2
2
IS ENDLESS
WATER
5 2
ENERGY
1 BROADWAY STORM PLANTERS YOU ARE HERE
2 18TH STREET SWALE
6
4
3 RAIN GARDENS 4 ALLEY SWALE 5 CURB BUMP-OUT SWALES
7
7
6 BROADWAY PLAZA
15
14
FOOD 7 HOME GARDENING DEMO AREA
4
8
8 RAISED BED PRODUCTION GARDEN
15
9 ORCHARDS 8 4
SHELTER
9 7 11 13
8
10 SUSTAINABLE HOUSING* 11 GREEN ROOF AT SHED
12
*POSSIBLE LATER-PHASE PROJECTS
9 7
14
8
ENERGY 12 GLASS RECYCLING 10
13 SOLAR PANELS 14 ENERGY-EFFICIENT SITE LIGHTING
5
14
14
15 WIND TURBINE 5
Follow the panels to learn more about 18Broadway’s holistic approach to urban development. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 4
Broadway Plaza The upper plaza looks southeast over the Crossroads Art District. The container garden is just beyond the plaza. The raised bed terraces are just beyond the container garden and descend to the opposite corner of the site. The benches were made from recycled ipe from Planet ReUse and built by a local furniture craftsman. Wineberry DG will fill the recesses below the benches and a larger specimen tree will be planted in the open cut for plaza shade.
6.4 BILLION
GALLONS OF COMBINED STORM WATER AND WASTEWATER
OVERFLOW INTO
That’s enough to fill Lake Lotawana, twice. 18Broadway addresses the issue by adopting nature’s approach. It captures and cleans storm water, including the pollutants it carries, on site before it can overwhelm the sewer system. Implementing best practices in storm water management, the project demonstrates how land can be developed to ensure the quality of our watershed, conserve rainfall, and reduce the city’s estimated $2.4 billion cost to repair its outdated sewer system. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 5
Bioretention soil was added to the site to improve site infiltration capacity affecting flow control and water quality treatment performance.
F C
C
C
F
A E D
A
PS
B
OK
-U
A
HO
A Rainfall from Broadway enters storm planters, where it is
SE
cleaned and a small amount retained. The excess is directed
HO
through the sidewalk via covered channels into a rain garden.
O
A
ST
B Water entering from the Broadway planters and 19th Street
LI
NE
trenches is cleaned and stored in a series of rain gardens. Excess water flows over weirs, or small dams, and cascades through the rain gardens.
WA TE
R
B
A
C Rainfall from 18th Street flows under the sidewalk via
D
covered channels into the 18th Street swale.
A
D Alley swales clean and convey water to the lower-most rain garden, which provides minor detention and helps regulate flow.
A
E Rain that falls on the existing building rooftop flows to the
B
18th Street swale.
I
F Curb bump-outs are swales that capture rainfall, filter it and release clean water while helping to control street traffic.
A
G Rainfall from 19th Street flows under sidewalk trenches into rain gardens.
H
H Water is directed to underground storage tanks through an B
intake at the lowest rain garden.
B I
F
G
G
G
Water is stored underground and pumped for irrigation needs.
F
FOLLOW THE RAINDROP Nature manages rainfall by passing it through soil and vegetation, purifying it along the way. 18Broadway follows nature’s model. Storm water travels through an integrated system of rain gardens and swales that filter out contaminants. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 6
A view looking south along Broadway Boulevard from Broadway Plaza. Stormwater planters are located along Broadway to capture stormwater from the street and convey it into the site and rain gardens. In larger water events the stormwater planters are designed to concurrently return water back onto the street.
In the spirit of Kansas City’s 10,000 Rain Gardens initiative, 18Broadway has several rain gardens. Long grasses and native and drought-tolerant plants hold water and act as filters cleaning the water as it flows on its journey.
CHANNEL TO PLANTER
RAIN GARDEN
RUN-OFF FROM STREETS AND BUILDINGS
ST OR M PL AN TE
WATER IN
CHANNEL TO RAINGARDEN
R
BR OA DW AY
EXCESS WATER FLOWS TO NEXT RAINGARDEN
WATER OUT
PONDING UP TO 7 IN. BIO-RETENTION SOIL INFILTRATION AT ABOUT 4 IN. PER HOUR
HOW CAN A CITY BLOCK USE RUNOFF AS A RESOURCE? Natural and manmade solutions at 18Broadway absorb, direct, clean and hold almost all of the annual storm water runoff around the site. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 7
EVAPORATION
LONG GRASSES AND NATIVE AND/OR DROUGHT-TOLERANT PLANTS
TRANSPIRATION
low water velocity, combined with thin-stemmed plants,
reduced outflow clean water
allows pollutants to settle out of the storm water
BIO-RETENTION SOIL, RECHARGING SOILS, AQUIFERS
INFILTRATION
HOW CAN A CITY BLOCK CLEAN ITS OWN WATER? Storm water, including pollutants dislodged during downpours, is cleaned naturally. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 8
There will be 77,000 native plants in the ground when 18 Broadway is complete
There are ten rain gardens that border the site on the west and south sides. The intent is to show a variety of rain gardens using drought tolerant and native species. The various types range in dominance from grasses to flowering and insect attracting. The consideration of Butterfly Milkweed is a result of Kansas City being on the Monarch Butterfly flyway. Below is a sample of the some of mixes one will find on site. Little Blue stem Mix
Biodiversity Mix
Little Bluestem 70% Blazing Star 5% Aromatic Aster 5% Missouri Rudbeckia 5% Glade Coneflower 5% Pale Purple Coneflower 5% Butterfly Milkweed 5%
Little Bluestem Sideoats Grama Prairie Dropseed Glade Coneflower Pale Purple Coneflower Butterfly Milkweed Blazing Star Prairie Larkspur Prairie Lupine
Rain Garden Mix 27% 26% 26% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3%
Soft Rush Marsh Blazing Star Blue Flag Iris Arrowhead Blue Lobelia
Cord grass Wetland Mix 60% 10% 10% 5% 5%
Prairie Cordgrass Soft Rush Butterfly Milkweed Blue Iris Blue Lobelia Arrowhead Glade Coneflower Prairie Larkspur Prairie Lupine Marsh Blazingstar Switchgrass
70% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 2% 2% 2% 8%
The rain gardens haven’t been planted, but the detention capabilities can be seen here during a heavy rainstorm. The total storage capacity of the site is 90,000 gallons.
water recirculates for irrigation
ST
EM
ULTRAVIOLET FILTER
INTAKE
from lowest rain garden
UN
DE
RG
RO
UN
D
IR
RI
GA
TI
ON
SY
20,000-GALLON UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANKS
FILTER & PUMP
REGULATOR captures 100 percent of average rainfalls and allows overflow during extreme rain events
DETAIL OF UNDERGROUND PUMP SYSTEM
HOW CAN A CITY BLOCK USE ITS OWN WATER? Excess storm water is stored for irrigation of 18Broadway’s gardens. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 9
DOES IT
MAKE SENSE TO FOR FOOD BUT
GET LESS? Our food can travel 2,000 miles or more from farm to plate. We pay for that in more ways than dollars and cents. The gardens of 18Broadway bring people closer to fresh food that tastes better and is better for us. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 10
6
6
1 1
1 3 1 HIGH PRODUCTION VEGETABLE GARDEN 2 3
2 SHED 3 CHERRY TREES 4 PEAR TREES
5 4
1
5 APPLE TREES 6 HOME GARDENING DEMO AREA
18Broadway’s high production volunteer garden is productive eight months out of the year, since many beds are “turned” at least twice. For example, one bed may have spinach in the spring, tomatoes in the summer, and still another crop in the fall.
HOW CAN A CITY BLOCK FEED PEOPLE IN NEED? Fresh produce from the volunteer-tended 18Broadway garden is donated to Harvesters Community Food Network of Kansas City. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 11
A view to the north with the garden terraces taking shape and Moshe Safdie’s Performing Arts Center rising in the background.
IN-GROUND GARDENS Requires minimal investment Clear a space Test and amend soil as needed Plant
CONTAINER GARDENING Easy to tend and weed Needs very little space Variety of styles Portability (if on wheels)
RAISED BEDS Improved accessibility and productivity Promotes better drainage Facilitates weed control Less soil compaction
EDIBLE LANDSCAPING Puts your yard to work for you A “green” alternative to traditional landscaping An economical way to add color and interest
HOW CAN A CITY BLOCK RECONNECT PEOPLE TO FOOD? The agricultural gardens at 18Broadway show how to grow productive, healthy crops at home without harsh chemical treatments through soil management, crop rotation, plant selection and organic-style approaches. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 12
A view to the demonstration garden from Broadway Boulevard looking across the Broadway Rain Gardens.
DST garden at 10th and Jefferson is in its 18th year Kathy Pemberton’s planting plan for DST’s Community Garden at 18th and Jefferson in the Quality Hill neighborhood.
The demonstration garden is a combination of raised beds and pots. A wider range of varietals will be showcased here in addition planned events.
Educational sign boards are located on site and are mounted on a signage structure designed from recycled fencing found on site.
BY DESIGNING HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING COSTS
CAN BE REDUCED
50%.
Buildings can be designed or renovated to passively collect, distribute and control the sun’s heat, reducing the need for electricity-driven heating and cooling systems. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 13
MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 14
THE SUN BEAMS MORE ENERGY TO EARTH THAN THE
WHOLE WORLD USES IN
Energy is abundant all around us. The goal is to tap into it as cleanly and effectively as possible. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 15
MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 17
PROCESSING PLANT cleaning, drying, optical sorting, fine grinding
FURNACE-READY CULLET
to nearby facilities to produce new products
NEW GLASS
INSULATION
WHAT IF EACH CITY BLOCK RECYCLED WASTE? By keeping glass out of landfills and using it instead to make fiberglass insulation (here in Kansas City) and new glass containers, much of the energy and labor—and all the raw materials that went into making it— are recaptured. The result? Dramatic energy savings and reductions in air and water emissions.
MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 16
WATER SOLAR
WIND
REDUCED NEED FOR LANDFILLS CREATING MORE ENERGY THAN USED ON SITE
HEALTHIER, TASTIER FOOD
CLEANER RIVERS AND STREAMS
WHAT EFFECT CAN ONE CITY BLOCK HAVE? 18Broadway is designed with a vision that, in an urban ecosystem, the built environment can exist in greater balance with the natural environment. MARCH 31, 2010
PAGE 18
The 18 Broadway Urban Agriculture block will transform a vacant lot by providing a qualitative streetscape that will benefit the businesses that surround it and create additional linkages across Broadway Boulevard connecting a community.