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Working Water

Reinventing the Storm Drain

Bill Wenk

$72.99

Hardback

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English
Oro Editions
11 April 2022
Water is far too valuable of a resource to be disposed as a waste. Working Water presents the work of Denver landscape architecture firm Wenk Associates, highlighting their projects that treat stormwater, and the infrastructure that controls it, as a resource that supports functioning natural systems and enhanced urban open space. Built projects illustrate how stormwater runoff can be directed to support an intimate private garden, to the large-scale redevelopment of derelict industrial lands in Milwaukee organised around a stormwater park and open space system. Planning projects range from a plan for a surface stormwater system developed incrementally for a redeveloping urban district in central Denver, to a multi-generational plan for restoration of the Los Angeles River that will require profound changes in stormwater management policies and practice for full implementation. The final chapter describes the challenges, strategies, and lessons learned over the firm's 37-year history as part of implementing new approaches to infrastructure design that can withstand the test of time.

AUTHOR: Bill Wenk is founder and President of Wenk Associates, Inc., a Denver-based landscape architectural firm. For over 37 years, Bill has been influential in the restoration and redevelopment of urban river and stream corridors, the transformation of derelict urban land, and the design of public parks and open spaces. He is recognised nationally for utilising stormwater as a resource. Bill's extensive portfolio includes a master plan for the reclamation of the 32-mile Los Angeles River corridor in California; green infrastructure planning and implementation for the redevelopment of abandoned railyards, and restoration of the Menomonee River in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and transformation of the South Platte River Valley in the heart of Denver into a mosaic of parks, open spaces and in-fill development. All projects focus on site and district-scale infrastructure systems that incorporate stormwater as a multi-benefit resource.

SELLING POINTS: •

Built projects that range in scale from an experimental stormwater garden at the firm's former offices in Denver, to large-scale redevelopment of derelict industrial lands in central Milwaukee organised around a green infrastructure stormwater system •

Planning projects that range from surface stormwater strategies for a planned infill urban district in central Denver, to a multi-generational plan for restoration of the Los Angeles River that requires profound changes in stormwater management policies and practice •

Projects that add value through the creation of parks and open spaces as part of providing required stormwater infrastructure •

Alternative ways of describing beauty as a result of adapting functional infrastructure to promote functioning natural systems and human use

150 colour images

By:  
Imprint:   Oro Editions
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 279mm,  Width: 228mm, 
Weight:   1.186kg
ISBN:   9781943532360
ISBN 10:   1943532362
Pages:   180
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
INTRODUCTION 6 PREFACE: Inspired by Land and Water 8 PART I: Land, Water, and Resilient Communities 14 PART II: Projects 28 Wenk Office Stormwater Gardens 32 Northside Park 34 Confluence Park 42 Shop Creek 52 Burgess Creek Promenade 60 The Blue Riverwalk 68 River North Park and Promenade 74 TAXI Mixed-Use Development 80 Lowry Parks and Open Space 90 Menomonee Valley Redevelopment 104 The River Mile 118 Grand River Corridor 126 Los Angeles River Revitalization 132 PART III: What We’ve Learned 140 AFTERWORD: Wenk Next 158 Working Water Glossary 162 Project Credits 170 Acknowledgments 184

Bill Wenk is founder and President of Wenk Associates, Inc., a Denver-based landscape architectural firm. For over 37 years, Bill has been influential in the restoration and redevelopment of urban river and stream corridors, the transformation of derelict urban land, and the design of public parks and open spaces. He is recognized nationally for utilizing stormwater as a resource. Bill's extensive portfolio includes a master plan for the reclamation of the 32-mile Los Angeles River corridor in California; green infrastructure planning and implementation for the redevelopment of abandoned railyards, and restoration of the Menomonee River in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and transformation of the South Platte River Valley in the heart of Denver into a mosaic of parks, open spaces and in-fill development. All projects focus on site and district-scale infrastructure systems that incorporate stormwater as a multi-benefit resource. Bill lectures frequently at universities and conferences across the nation on the integration of stormwater systems and public space as a component of green infrastructure. He served on a National Science Foundation committee assembled to recommend revisions to Federal rules and regulations governing nonpoint source stormwater pollution. He has served as a visiting professor at several universities. Bill holds a Master of Landscape Architecture from the University of Oregon and a Bachelor of Science, Landscape Architecture from Michigan State University and is a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects.

Reviews for Working Water: Reinventing the Storm Drain

...Working Water reconsiders the lowly storm drain, presenting a baker's dozen of case studies (some built, some in proposal) that elevate stormwater systems into landscapes of habitat renewal and community gathering. --Landscape Architecture Magazine 'Reinventing the Stormdrain' is a refreshing take on the monograph. The book is a visual treat--multi-dimensional with beautiful, fresh photos and gorgeous hand drawings. It is also a timely call-to-action from a pioneer whose work has been dedicated to water conservation in design. Bill Wenk generously shares his insights from decades of leading the integration of water systems into place-based designs beloved by their communities. Bill's foundation of land ethics, ingrained growing up on a Michigan farm, comes through in the beauty, simplicity, and elegance of nature-based design. A tremendous contribution to communicating across the ecology of people that influence the built environment about the urgency and the opportunities of designing systemically with water. --Deb Guenther, FASLA, Mithun


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