Quality Assurance for Nonpoint Source Best Management Practices (BMPs)

 
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Tree box filters are mini bioretention areas installed beneath trees that can be very effective at controlling runoff, especially when distributed throughout the site.1  Runoff is directed to the tree box, where it is cleaned by vegetation and soil before entering a catch basin. The runoff collected in the tree-boxes helps irrigate the trees.

Manufactured Tree Box Filters For Stormwater Management
Manufactured Tree Box Filters For Stormwater Management
(Source:
Virginia DCR Stormwater Management Program)

Tree box filters are based on an effective and widely used  “bioretention or rain garden” technology with improvements to enhance pollutant removal, increase performance reliability, increase ease of construction, reduce maintenance costs and improve aesthetics.  Typical landscape plants (shrubs, ornamental grasses, trees and flowers) are used as an integral part of the bioretention / filtration system.  They can fit into any landscape scheme increasing the quality of life in urban areas by adding beauty, habitat value, and reducing urban heat island effects.  

The system consists of a container filled with a soil mixture, a mulch layer, under-drain system and a shrub or tree.  Stormwater runoff drains directly from impervious surfaces through a filter media.  Treated water flows out of the system through an under drain connected to a storm drainpipe / inlet or into the surrounding soil.  Tree box filters can also be used to control runoff volumes / flows by adding storage volume beneath the filter box with an outlet control device.

 


1 Natural Resources Defense Council, 2001: Stormwater Strategies: Community Responses to Runoff Pollution. http://www.nrdc.org/water/pollution/storm/stoinx.asp

 

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