Abstract

Unresourceful usage of rainwater continues to be a serious problem as this type of natural resource is still treated as wastewater that most often ends up directly in the sewer system. The aim of the article is to present a concept of sustainable rainwater management within a completed housing estate in Cracow (Poland). Sustainable solutions are proposed, such as rain gardens, soakaways, permeable surfaces, and infiltration boxes, limiting the surface runoff, feasible for implementation in an existing development. Their efficacy was shown by estimating the runoff reduction and two financial assessments: (1) the required investment costs converted to costs per 1 m2 of residential area and as per 1 household, and (2) the assessment of financial profitability by the rate of return and the payback period, which are the basic tool for making decisions by potential investors: developers and residents. On the cost side, investment costs are included, and on the benefit side, savings resulting from the reduction of national and municipal rainwater fees. The analysis also aims to examine the incentive nature of these fees. National rainwater drainage fees, which have been introduced to encourage rainwater retention, have low non-incentive rates and the potential benefits of reducing them maybe around 1% of investment capital, which gives a payback period of almost 100 years. Higher rates of municipal fees are more motivating for investors; the proposed concept of rainwater management can potentially bring savings of around 9% (rate of return), and investment can be recovered within 12 years.

Highlights

  • Rainwater management poses a great challenge to the urbanized areas in a large number of Polish cities

  • The engineering solutions applied to date, based on rainwater collection and drainage via combined and separate sewer systems, prove to be ineffective with the current rapid urbanization resulting in the limited green area and the increase of unfavorable weather events—torrential rains and cloudbursts [1,2]

  • Modern approaches to rainwater management are based on the restoration or preservation of the existing green areas capable of rainwater infiltration as well as solutions allowing runoff retention and/or its delay

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Summary

Introduction

Rainwater management poses a great challenge to the urbanized areas in a large number of Polish cities. Water 2020, 12, 151 solutions in urbanized areas, e.g., natural and artificial retention, green areas, natural watercourses and wetlands, green roofs and green walls, swales, green infiltration trenches, and rain gardens, offer benefits recognized as public welfare in terms of climate change mitigation (reducing the urban heat island effect and temperature, increasing humidity and infiltration, improving soil properties, increasing groundwater recharge, reducing runoff and air pollution, etc.) They contribute to increased coverage of green and recreational areas, as well as increased biodiversity within urban areas which, overall, improves both residents’ quality of life and the condition of the urban ecosystems [6,7,8,9,10,11,12]

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