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Sustainable Development Guide

Section 6: References

Section 1: Conservation Design Approach

  1. Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, Vol. 2, Technical Manual, Chapter 1, 1.4-3.
    http://www.georgiastormwater.com/
  2. New York State Stormwater Management Design Manual, Chap. 4.
    http://www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dow/toolbox/swmanual/
  3. Georgia Stormwater Manual, Vol. 2, Chapter 1, 1.4-1.
  4. Federal Highway Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation. Stormwater Best Management Practices in an Ultra-Urban Setting: Selection and Monitoring
    http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/ultraurb/uubmp6p3.htm
  5. Franklin Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual, Section 1- Introduction.
    http://www.franklin-gov.com/engineering/STORMWATER/manual.htm
  6. Franklin Stormwater Manual, Section 1- Introduction.
  7. Natural Resources Defense Council. Stormwater Strategies, Chapter 12, Low Impact Development
  8. Franklin Stormwater Manual, Section 1- Introduction.
  9. Prince Georges County, Maryland, Department of Environmental Resources Programs and Planning Division. Low-Impact Development Design Strategies, An Integrated Design Approach, pp. 2-6 (EPA 841-B-00-003, January 2000). Copies available free of charge from the EPA; call 800-490-9198, or visit http://www.epa.gov/ncepihom/.
  10. Franklin Stormwater Manual, Section 1- Introduction.
  11. Natural Resources Defense Council. Stormwater Strategies, Chapter 12, Low Impact Development
  12. Natural Resources Defense Council. Stormwater Strategies, Chapter 12, Low Impact Development
  13. Center for Watershed Protection, Better Site Design.
    http://www.cwp.org/better_site_design.htm
    (Note: The CWP Web site gives the 22 model development principles but does not contain the entire text of the Better Site Design Handbook. A printed version of the handbook is available at http://www.cwp.org/publicationstore/bsd.htm)
  14. Strom, Steven, Kurt Nathan, Jake Woland and David Lamm. Site Engineering for Landscape Architects, 4th Edition, 2005. Wiley. ISBN: 0471273945. New York.

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Section 2: Roads and Parking Lots

  1. Nonpoint Source Education for Municipal Officials
    http://nemo.uconn.edu/tools/reducing_runoff/runoff.htm
  2. Milwaukee River Basin Partnership
    http://clean-water.uwex.edu/plan/streetsroads.htm
  3. Nonpoint Source Education for Municipal Officials
  4. Better Site Design: A Handbook for Changing Development Rules in Your Community, p. 37. (Available from the Center for Watershed Protection: http://www.cwp.org/publicationstore/bsd.htm)
  5. Better Site Design, p. 43 (see Reference 4 above).
  6. Suburban Maryland Building Institution, 1990, unpublished.
  7. Better Site Design, p. 55 (see Reference 4 above).
  8. Better Site Design, p. 73 (see Reference 4 above).
  9. Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, Volume 2, Modular Porous Paver Systems, 3.3-44
  10. Better Site Design, p. 73 (see Reference 4 above).
  11. Cahill, T. 1994. Technical Note 21: A Second Look at Porous Pavement/Underground Recharge. Technical Notes-Urban Best Management Practices. Technical Note #21 from Watershed Protection Techniques. 1(2): 76-78.
  12. Better Site Design, p. 73 (see Reference 4 above).
  13. Field Evaluation of Permeable Pavements for Stormwater Management, Olympia, Washington. Environmental Protection Agency Washington, DC 20460, October 2000, U.S. Office of Water (4203) EPA-841-B-00-005
    http://www.epa.gov/owow/nps/pavements.pdf
  14. Better Site Design, p. 73 (see Reference 4 above)
  15. Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, Volume 2
  16. Better Site Design, p. 83 (see Reference 4 above)
  17. Watershed Protection Techniques, Section 6, Article 47: The Benefits of Better Site Design in Commercial Development
  18. Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, Volume 2, 1.4-29
  19. See Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, Volume 2, 3.2-44, for more detail on specifications
  20. Big Sioux River Drainage Information
  21. Franklin Stormwater Manual, Section 6, Permanent Stormwater Treatment Controls (PTP).
  22. Franklin Stormwater Manual, Section 6, Permanent Stormwater Treatment Controls (PTP).
  23. Franklin Stormwater Manual, Section 6, Permanent Stormwater Treatment Controls (PTP).

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Section 3: Site Development

  1. Better Site Design, p. 95 (see Section 2, Reference 4)
  2. Better Site Design, p. 95 (see Section 2, Reference 4)
  3. Better Site Design, p. 123 (see Section 2, Reference 4)
  4. Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, office park example, Vol. 2, Chapter 1, Section 1.4, p. 38.
  5. Georgia Stormwater Management Manual, commercial development example, Vol. 2, Chapter 1, Section 1.4, p. 37.
  6. Better Site Design, p. 103 (see Section 2, Reference 4)
  7. Natural Resources Defense Council. Stormwater Strategies, Chapter 12, Low Impact Development

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Section 4: Conservation of Natural Areas

  1. Center for Watershed Protection, Site Planning for Urban Stream Protection, The Architecture of Stream Buffers, Chapter 5, p. 25.

  2. Palone, R.S. and A.H. Todd (eds.), Chesapeake Bay Riparian Handbook: A Guide for Establishing and Maintaining Riparian Forest Buffers, 1997. USDA Forest Service. NA-TP-02-97. Radnor, PA.
    http://www.chesapeakebay.net/pubs/subcommittee/nsc/
    forest/sect03.pdf
  3. Klapproth, Julia Caldwell, Function, Design, and Establishment of Riparian Forest Buffers: A Review, major paper submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Forestry, February 8, 1999, Blacksburg, VA
  4. Better Site Design, p. 143 (see Section 2, Reference 4)
  5. Goldman, S.J., K. Jackson, and T.A. Borstztynksy. Conservation Design for Stormwater Management: A Design Approach to Reduce Stormwater Impacts from Land Development and Achieve Multiple Objectives Related to Land Use. Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, Dover, DE, and the Environmental Management Center of the Brandywine Conservancy, Chadds Ford, PA.
  6. Better Site Design, p. 143 (see Section 2, Reference 4).
  7. Better Site Design, p. 151 (see Section 2, Reference 4).
  8. Better Site Design, p. 152-3 (see Section 2, Reference 4).
  9. Better Site Design, p. 167 (see Section 2, Reference 4).

 

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Contents

Introduction

1. Conservation design approach

2. Roads and parking lots

Roads

Parking

3. Site development

4. Conservation of natural areas

5. Pilot studies

6. References

7. Partners

 

 

 

 


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