m |
m |
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Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
</tr> | </tr> | ||
<tr> | <tr> | ||
− | <td>Infiltration basin</td> | + | <td>Infiltration (basin, trench, underground, dry well)</td> |
<td>Downgradient of other water quantity or water quality control practices</td> | <td>Downgradient of other water quantity or water quality control practices</td> | ||
<td>Development or regional scale control</td> | <td>Development or regional scale control</td> |
Summary of factors that can be used to determine differences between infiltration basins and bioretention basins. This table corresponds with Table 1 in the flowchart [1].
Link to this table
BMP | Typical position in watershed | Treatment scale | Typical storm sizes | Maximum drainage area guidelines | Maximum ponding depth guidelines | Growing medium |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Infiltration (basin, trench, underground, dry well) | Downgradient of other water quantity or water quality control practices | Development or regional scale control | Less frequent large storm events that exceed capacity of upgradient practices | 50 acres | 4 feet | Native soil |
Bioretention basin | Located throughout the watershed | Site scale control | Small storms (water quality events) | Typically 5 acres | Ideally 12 inches; can be up to 18 inches with appropriate design and plant selection | Engineered growing medium |