AlexRenew, the project to solve combined sewer overflows in Alexandria, is reaching out to the public to hear their concerns as the project moves into it’s last stages. The final components include: Pile Driving at the Pendelton Street site and months of concrete pours at the Royal Street site. This will finish the liner of the 130-foot-deep drop shaft connecting the site's diversion facility to the Waterfront Tunnel bringing the project to completion.
The area of Alexandria around Old Town has a Combined Sewer
System which is a piped sewer system where there is one pipe that carries both
sanitary sewage and stormwater to the local wastewater treatment plant,
AlexRenew. This was how sewer systems were often built in the days when
sanitation was simply moving sewage out of the city to the rivers and streams.
Back then one piping system was cheaper and adequate for the job. Today when
sewage is treated by wastewater treatment plants that is no longer adequate.
When it rains, water that falls in the streets, enters the
storm water drains and is combined with the sanitary wastewater entering the
sewers from homes and businesses. The combined flow of the sewage and rain can
overwhelm the wastewater treatment plant. So, to protect the sewage system as a
whole, the combined sewage and rainfall has been released into the local creeks from
one of the “Combined Sewer Overflows” which are release locations permitted and
monitored by the regulators. Though it’s monitored it increases nutrient and
bacterial contamination to the streams and rivers.
To solve this problem in 2017 the state passed legislation
to eliminate these overflows by 2025, creating a challenge for the city, but
partially based on the experience of Washington DC in addressing their combined
sewer problem, AlexRenew was confident that they could meet this challenge.
Alexandria and AlexRenew submitted a long term control plan to the Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality (VDEQ) that was approved in 2018. Alexandria transferred ownership of the outfalls and
the interceptor lines (the sewer mains transporting to the raw sewage to the
treatment plant) to AlexRenew. The approved and almost compled plan, called RiverRenew, includes
building a tunnel system with:
- Storage
tunnels
- Conveyance
tunnels
- Diversion
facilities (diversion chambers and drop shafts)
- Dewatering
pumping stations
and upgrading the AlexRenew waste water treatment plant by:
- Adding a wet weather pumping station and
- Increase
treatment peak capacity for the wastewater treatment plant from 108 to 116
million gallons a day
Each individual part of the diversion facility was carefully
engineered to control and transfer these flows as efficiently as possible. However, there have been and will continue to be
disruptions as the work is completed. AlexRenew continues to reach out to the
public and hear their concerns. You can attend one of two listening sessions
next week.
RiverRenew Community Listening Session: Pendleton Street
September 16, 2024 at 5:30 PM — 7:00 PM501 N. Union
Street –
RiverRenew Community Listening Session: Pendleton Street
September 16, 2024 at 5:30 PM — 7:00 PM
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