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Tables of Contents for Handbook of Water Sensitive Planning and Design
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Series statement
Foreword
Preface
Background - Perspectives of water management: Representative examples from the recent literature
Robert France
1
8
PART I WATER SENSITIVE DESIGN
Robert France
Overview: New interpretations in stormwater management and wetland park creation
9
346
Stormwater management and stormwater restoration
Bruce K. Ferguson
11
20
Response---Stormwater infiltration: Curing the disease rather than treating the symptoms
Successful stormwater management ponds (Massachusetts)
Desheng Wang
31
18
Response---Centralized stormwater treatment: Improving performance through engineering design
Open spaces and impervious surfaces: Model development principles and benefits
Jennifer A. Zielinski
49
18
Response---Using computer scenarios to improve site design
Post-industrial watersheds: Retrofits and restorative redevelopment (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Richard D. Pinkham and Timothy Collins
67
30
Response---Raising consciousness through interdisciplinary design workshops
Low-impact development An alterative stormwater management technology
Larry S. Coffman
97
28
Response---Thinking big, acting small: Multi-tasking and the benefits of dispersed micromanagement
Water gardens as stormwater infrastructure (Portland, Oregon)
Thomas Liptan and Robert K. Murase
125
30
Response---Letting it soak in
Retaining water: Technical support for capturing parking lot runoff (Ithaca, New York)
Robert France and Philip Craul
155
20
Response---To build an oxymoron: A green parking lot
A productive stormwater park (Farmington, Minnesota)
Diana Balmori
175
18
Response---Successfully marrying form and function in stormwater management
A stormwater wetland becomes a nature park (British Columbia, Canada)
Catherine BerrisResponse---Naturalized design: Triumph of imagination and innovation
193
12
Wetlands-based indirect potable reuse project (West Palm Beach, Florida)
Larry N. Schwartz Lee P. Wiseman and W. Erik Olson
205
10
Response---Treating wastewater with innovative technology
Restoring urban wetland---pond systems (Boston, Massachusetts)
Clarissa Rowe
215
20
Response---Project development through concerned citizenry
Water connections: Wetlands for science instruction (Wichita, Kansas)
Robert France and Kaki Martin
235
12
Response---Project development of interpretive wetlands
Constructed wetlands and stormwater management at the Northern Water Feature (Sydney Olympic Park)
Glenn Allen
247
16
Response---Highly visible water: Recreating a landscape for public use
Principles and applications of wetland park creation
James S. Bays
263
34
Response---Designing wetlands for multiple benefits
Applications of low-impact development techniques (Maryland)
Michael L. Clar
297
20
Response---Values of demonstration projects and case studies of stormwater source management
Restoring and protecting a small, urban lake (Boston, Massachusetts)
Nicholas Pouder and Robert France
317
24
Response---Buying time by bioengineering
Integrated ecology, geomorphology, and bioengineering for watershed-friendly design
Wendi Goldsmith
341
14
Response---Sustainability through interdisciplinarity
Discussion summary: Constraints, challenges, and opportunities in implementing innovative stormwater management techniques
355
2
Discussion summary: Moving from single-purpose treatment wetlands toward multifunction designed wetland parks
357
2
PART II WATER SENSITIVE PLANNING
Robert France
Overview: New interpretations in the management of watersheds and riparian buffers and corridors
359
324
Shoreline buffers: Protecting water quality and biological diversity (New Hampshire)
Frank Mitchell
361
18
Response---Buffer strips: More than green eyelashes?
River restoration planning (Connecticut)
James G. MacBroom
379
16
Response---Water quality improvements are not enough
Greenways as green infrastructure in the new millennium
Charles A. Flink
395
12
Response---Corridors that integrate natural, societal, and social elements
Natural resource stewardship planning and design: Fresh Pond Reservation (Massachusetts)
Thomas S. Benjamin
407
24
Response---Protecting and restoring treasured landscapes: Complexity and integration
Treating rivers as systems to meet multiple objectives
Leslie Zucker Anne Weekes Mark Vian and Jay D. Dorsey
431
14
Response---Beyond the banks: Holistic planning of rivers as more than the sum of their parts
What progress has been made in the Remedial Action Plan program after ten years of effort? (Ontario, Canada)
Gail Krantzberg and Judi Barnes
445
14
Response---Measuring recovery of impaired waters
Watershed management plans: Bridging from science to policy to operations (San Francisco, California)
David Blau
459
18
Response---Sociology of implementing adaptive management
Watershed assessment planning process assessment (Johnson County, Kansas)
Dennis A. Haag Stephen A. Hurst and Bryan J. Bear
477
14
Response---Managing suburban watersheds for multiple objectives
Urban watershed management (Detroit, Michigan)
Kelly A. Cave
491
22
Response---Looking beyond the end of the pipe
Modeling a soil moisture index using geographic information systems in a developing country context (Thailand)
John S. Felkner and Michael W. Binford
513
28
Response---Incorporating scientific information into land-use planning
The design of regions: A watershed planning approach to sustainability
Daniel Williams
541
16
Response---Expanding planning vision in space and time
GIS watershed mapping: Developing and implementing a watershed natural resources inventory (New Hampshire)
Jeffrey A. Schloss
557
20
Response---Janus planning: Using computer tools to look backward and forward simultaneously
The effect of spatial location in land-water interactions: A comparison of two modeling approaches to support watershed planning (Newfoundland, Canada)
Margot Young Cantwell
577
24
Response---Linking land use to landscapes for water quality protection
Spatial investigation of applying Ontario's timber management guidelines: GIS analysis for riparian areas of concern
Robert France John S. Felkner Michael Flaxman and Robert Rempel
601
14
Response---Size matters
Aquifer recharge management model: Evaluating the impacts of urban development on groundwater resources (Galilee, Israel)
Amir Mueller Robert France and Carl Steinitz
615
20
Response---Planning by examining alternatives
Factors influencing sediment transport from logging roads near boreal trout lakes (Ontario, Canada)
Robert France
635
12
Response---Empirically testing planing assumptions
Limnology, plumbing and planning: Evaluation of nutrient-based limits to shoreline development in Precambrian Shield watersheds
Neil J. Hutchinson
647
36
Response---Land-lake linkages and land-use limits
Discussion summary: Social and political issues in managing riparian buffers and corridors
683
2
Discussion summary: Multiple objectives in watershed management through use of GIS analysis
685
2
Postscript: Implementing water sensitive planning and design
687
2
Index
689
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