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Rain Gardens And Residential Pollution | Earth Wise

July 12, 2023 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Rain gardens are a solution to residential pollution of waterways

Stormwater runoff has become the largest source of residential pollution for waterways.  As rainwater runs down roofs, over driveways and patios, and off other hard surfaces, it can pick up pollutants as it flows directly into streams, wetlands, lakes, and groundwater aquifers.  That water is typically routed directly through stormwater pipes and ditches with little filtering or treatment.  The main emphasis is on getting the water off of people‘s property as quickly and efficiently as possible to avoid flooding.

Many municipalities are dealing with the problem by installing rain gardens, which are a type of green infrastructure in commercial spaces that slow down and treat water before it enters streams, wetlands, and other bodies of waters.  When designed and installed properly with appropriate plants, rain gardens are like miniature water treatment facilities   Water gathers in the rain garden, soaks into the soil, and is taken up by plants.  The plants filter nutrients, sediments, and toxic materials from the runoff before excess water ever gets to waterways.

Homeowners are being encouraged to build their own rain gardens.  They need to familiarize themselves with how runoff from their roof, driveway, sidewalk, and roads is currently being routed and treated.  The idea is to try to incorporate that runoff into a rain garden design with sufficient area and infiltration rates.  The runoff would ultimately flow out from a safe, designated location into storm drains at a slower rate than from the previous impervious surfaces.  Homeowners would need to work with their local jurisdictions to find out the requirements for re-routing water in their area and make sure any modifications prevent erosion and protect nearby homes, roads, and other infrastructure.

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Rain gardens help keep pollutants out of waterways

Photo, posted March 3, 2017, courtesy of Jeremy Jeziorski / Oregon Convention Center via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

Better Paint For Cooler Buildings | Earth Wise

August 20, 2020 By EarthWise 2 Comments

white paints help keep buildings cool

A research team led by scientists at UCLA have developed a super-white paint that reflects as much as 98% of incoming heat from the sun.  Such paint, if used on rooftops and other parts of buildings, could have a major impact on reducing the costs of keeping buildings cool.

Passive daytime radiative cooling is a well-known method to keep buildings cooler.  By having building surfaces reflect sunlight and radiate heat into space, building temperatures can be significantly lowered.  This in turn cuts down on air conditioner use and associated carbon emissions.

A roof painted white will result in lower indoor temperatures than a darker roof.  But a white roof will do even more:  it can reject heat at infrared wavelengths that are invisible to our eyes.  This results in even more radiative cooling.

The best performing white paints currently available reflect about 85% of incoming solar radiation.  The rest is absorbed by materials in the paint.  The new research has identified simple modifications in paint ingredients that lead to a major increase in reflectivity.

Current reflective white paints use titanium dioxide, which absorbs UV radiation and therefore heats up under sunlight.  The researchers studied replacing it with other substances such as barite – an artist’s pigment – or with powdered Teflon, both of which allow the paint to reflect more of the sun’s radiation. 

Many cities are encouraging the use of cool-roof technologies on new buildings.  Using the most reflective coatings possible on rooftops, if applied on a sufficiently large scale, could have a real impact on climate change as well as saving significant amounts of energy used for running air conditioners in buildings.

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UCLA-led Team Develops Ways to Keep Buildings Cool with Improved Super White Paints

Photo, posted August 15, 2012, courtesy of Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio.

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