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Urban vacant lands impart hydrological benefits across city landscapes

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Urban vacant lands impart hydrological benefits across city landscapes

C. Kelleher, H. E. Golden, et al.

This innovative study by Christa Kelleher, Heather E. Golden, Sean Burkholder, and William Shuster explores the potential of vacant lots in urban areas to absorb rainfall and reduce stormwater runoff, demonstrating that these spaces can significantly alleviate pressure on aging wastewater infrastructures.... show more
Abstract
Cities evolve through phases of construction, demolition, vacancy, and redevelopment, each impacting water movement at the land surface by altering soil hydrologic properties, land cover, and topography. Currently unknown is whether the variable physical and vegetative characteristics associated with vacant parcels and introduced by demolition may absorb rainfall and thereby diminish stormwater runoff. To investigate this, we evaluate how vacant lots modulate citywide hydrologic partitioning by synthesizing a novel field dataset across 500+ parcels in Buffalo, New York, USA. Vacant lot infiltration rates vary widely (0.001 to 5.39 cm h−1), though parcels are generally well-vegetated and gently sloped. Extending field estimates to 2400 vacant parcels, we estimate that vacant lands citywide may cumulatively infiltrate 51–54% additional annual rainfall volume as compared to pre-demolition state, in part by reducing and disconnecting impervious areas. Our findings differentiate vacant lots as purposeful landscapes that can alleviate large water fluxes into aging wastewater infrastructure.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 26, 2020
Authors
Christa Kelleher, Heather E. Golden, Sean Burkholder, William Shuster
Tags
vacant lots
stormwater runoff
urban redevelopment
infiltration rates
environmental impact
Buffalo New York
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