Providing a Sustainable Water Supply for a Virginia Community’s Future
Established in 1959, Loudoun Water provides public water and sewer service for residents of Loudoun County, Virginia. The utility has been providing clean and safe drinking water for decades through wholesale purchase from a neighboring utility which sources their supply from the Potomac River. Forecasts of significant growth in Loudoun County prompted Loudoun Water to embark on a planning initiative called the Potomac Water Supply Program (PWSP), established to ensure a safe, sustainable water supply for the future. The PWSP includes a new raw water intake on the Potomac River; raw water transmission mains; off-line raw water storage using a series of abandoned quarries; a new water treatment plant and finished water transmission. CDM Smith was retained to perform preliminary engineering, final design, bid phase services, and construction management for the 20-mgd state-of-the-art Trap Rock Water Treatment Facility (TRWTF) and finished water transmission system.
“The Potomac River has supported Loudoun County’s growth for decades, but the river requires the additional off-line quarry storage to sustain population growth while maintaining minimum flows in the river,” said CDM Smith discipline leader for water treatment and drinking water expert Bill Dowbiggin, PE, BCEE. “The new facility will provide a reliable and solid foundation for future growth.”
A Best-In-Class Drinking Water Plant
During the plant’s preliminary design phase, the project team began by analyzing the Potomac River’s water quality to best determine treatment goals for the Trap Rock plant. Targeted bench- and full-scale tests helped to support the development of design criteria for preoxidation and ozone disinfection treatment processes. Components of the facility include:
- An ozone generation, delivery and contacting system that includes on-site liquid oxygen vaporization and ozone generation, raw water pre-oxidation using sidestream injection and pipeline flash reactors, and intermediate (settled water) ozonation utilizing sidestream injection and mixing nozzles in contact basins
- A two-stage rapid mixing system consisting of a pumped injection flash mixing system and a mechanical vertical shaft mixing system, allowing for sequential addition of treatment chemicals in either or both mixing stages
- Parallel three-stage tapered flocculation trains with vertical turbine-type flocculators and variable-speed drives to control mixing energy
- Conventional sedimentation basins with chain and flight solids collection equipment
- GAC/sand dual media biological filters with nozzle and plenum type underdrain system
- Ultraviolet (UV) reactors for disinfection and/or as an additional treatment barrier
- A finished water pumping station sized to meet the plant expansion capacity of 40 mgd, with three vertical turbine can pumps rated at 10 mgd each for finished water, three backwash pumps and a layout that includes pump slots for installing additional pumps in the future. A 2-mgd sanitary sewer pumping station and the associated 12-inch ductile iron and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) sanitary sewer force main piping from the site to an existing outfall was also constructed
- Approximately 5,000 linear feet of 42-inch finished water transmission main, including a tunnel portion and approximately 1,500 linear feet of 24-inch and 16-inch mains for future tie-in
- A residuals treatment and recycle system that includes flow equalization, plate settlers, gravity thickening, recycle pumping (designed for full recycle) and emergency overflow storage
It’s been great to work with a utility that is so forward-thinking; it’s allowed us to find the best solutions for Loudoun County residents.
Promoting Sustainability from the Ground Up
From its inception, the Trap Rock Water Treatment Facility was designed to meet drinking water regulations via sustainable expansion and low-impact development principles. LEED certification of the Administrative Building is being pursued by use of recycled and locally sourced building materials, drought tolerant landscaping, water-efficient plumbing fixtures, energy-efficient lighting with automatic controls, natural ventilation, and a high-efficiency HVAC system that operates based on an energy recovery method. It is expected that the Administration Building will generate roughly 40,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of clean renewable energy annually as a result of a new solar photovoltaic system. The process areas were strategically located to minimize earth moving and head loss across the plant. The design also includes a 300-foot no-build buffer, preservation of existing trees, and careful integration of stormwater and erosion and sediment controls.
The facility was designed to allow for cost-effective expansion from 20-mgd to 40-mgd with minimal additional capital investments and potential intermediate uprating steps. Treatment process features and space for future treatment alternatives were carefully planned to address regulatory changes and/or emerging contaminants.
“The program that’s in place right now is set to evolve over the next 50 years,” said Bill Dowbiggin. “It’s been great to work with a utility that is so forward-thinking; it’s allowed us to implement innovative strategies during every step of the project and find the best solutions for Loudoun County residents.”
Architectural Design for Loudoun Water's Administrative Building
Based on our previous experience with water treatment facilities, our experts understood the functional importance of site planning, process flow, administration needs, personnel support, vehicular circulation, safety, and facility layout. The architecture team took the following five step approach to bring Loudoun Water's administrative building to life:
- Building programming: The team created a questionnaire to gather statistical data, like staff information, hours of operation, levels of maintenance services). Then, they reviewed the data and interviewed appropriate staff to vet its accuracy and discuss operational needs to lay the groundwork for the admin building design.
- Schematic design: The team created a space needs analysis and functional relationship diagrams to define the most optimal design for the building.
- Code reviews: In workshops with the Loudoun Water team, CDM Smith evaluated compliance according to the State Building Code and International Building Code, the Accessibility Code, the Americans with Disabilities Act and other related codes.
- Design development: Loudoun Water and CDM Smith's architectural team collaborated in interactive work sessions to develop integrated architectural design concepts and conceptual 3D building models.
- Construction documents: Lastly, the team prepped final drawings and specifications for building construction to bring the facility to life.
The roof was uniquely designed to slope in two different directions to allow for water flow without using internal or external rain leaders — It took a bit of imagination.
The new facility will provide a reliable and solid foundation for future growth.