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Recorded October 28, 2015 at the National Building Museum, Washington D.C.
In urban areas, stormwater presents major challenges for water quality. Runoff and combined sewer overflows result in impaired quality and degraded watersheds. Increasingly, green infrastructure approaches can treat and reduce discharge volumes and help mitigate flood risk, in addition to a range of environmental, social, and economic benefits. Learn from the experiences of Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia in adopting green stormwater management approaches.
Moderator
Speakers
Bethany Bezak, PE, LEED AP
Mathy Stanislaus
By American Planning Association4.5
5757 ratings
Recorded October 28, 2015 at the National Building Museum, Washington D.C.
In urban areas, stormwater presents major challenges for water quality. Runoff and combined sewer overflows result in impaired quality and degraded watersheds. Increasingly, green infrastructure approaches can treat and reduce discharge volumes and help mitigate flood risk, in addition to a range of environmental, social, and economic benefits. Learn from the experiences of Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia in adopting green stormwater management approaches.
Moderator
Speakers
Bethany Bezak, PE, LEED AP
Mathy Stanislaus

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