Easton Park in New Orleans is both a playground and a flood-defense system
I'm Dr. Anthony Lysowicz, and this is Climate Connections.
In the New Orleans neighborhood of Mid-City, kids run and play at Eastern Park, perhaps
unaware that a million gallons of stormwater can be stored in tanks beneath the grassy
field.
Megan Williams is with the New Orleans Office of Resilience and Sustainability.
She says when rain falls in New Orleans, it must be pumped out of the city, so it does
not pool on streets, sidewalks, and yards.
But during extreme storms, the pump system cannot keep up, and residents of the low-lying
area around Eastern Park have suffered the consequences.
This neighborhood has gotten a ton of flood events.
So the city has been developing ways to temporarily store excess water, and then release it slowly
into the pump system.
In Eastern Park, the city installed rain gardens and permeable pavers, to allow rain
to soak into the ground, and large storm drains that feed excess water into large tanks
under the park.
This helps the city manage more stormwater without interfering with people's enjoyment
of the park.
They can go play baseball, they can go play on a playground equipment, and when it's
raining, we are holding this huge amount of water and helping keep the neighborhood dry.
Community Connections is produced by the Yale Center for Environmental Communication.
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