Showing posts with label storm water retention ponds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label storm water retention ponds. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Pretty cool construction stuff....

I've been enjoying walking Jax around our neighborhood lake where I can get an up close and personal view of the construction site just feet away.


This is what the final product will eventually look like


To date they have these foundation columns in place.  They are setting up what looks like heavy scaffolding, which will hold up horizontal steel panels that a layer of steel reinforced concrete can be poured on top of.  When that concrete hardens (cures) they will take the scaffolding down, add on to the columns to make them another story taller, then reinstall the scaffolding for another layer of concrete, over and over, higher and higher, until the owner runs out of money.



Have you ever noticed these beautiful man-made "water features" inside many new developments?  I'll bet you thought it was so nice of the developers to go to such great lengths to beautify their projects, didn't you?  You would be wrong.



Here's what they're really for:  They're storm water retention ponds.  This is what they look like drained ^ .  In flat land like we have here, with everything paved over (parking lots, streets, buildings, etc), there is no place for rainwater to soak in.  Therefore developers dig these big "ponds" lined with decorative stone walls, then empty all the surrounding storm water collection drains into them.  That's what that big pipe just below wall height in the far right/center of the picture is. (There are several more you can't see also dumping water in.)  From here the water will drain into a larger city drain, then a creek, then a larger river, and eventually out to somewhere far, far away you'll never see.



They're currently draining our beloved neighborhood "lake" so they can install new storm water pipes into it to drain the new building site.  These look to be about 4' in diameter.  This is pretty heavy duty civil engineering stuff.

The bottom line is this:  developers don't do anything out of the kindness of their hearts.  Everything they do makes them money or they don't do it.  No "water feature" (storm water retention pond), no pretty landscaping, no zoning approval, no building permit, no payday.  Now you know.

S