Ponds and Water Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ponds and Water Management

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Rumbold-Ayers is a landscape and garden design practice, based near Salisbury, Wiltshire. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ponds and Water Management


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Ponds and Water Management
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  • The detailing of external systems such as
    rainwater harvesting, grey water recycling,
    drainage or water features may be conveniently
    addressed as part of the garden and landscape
    scope.
  • Water Features, Ponds and Natural Swimming Pools
  • Formal or informal ponds, and fountains or other
    water features, are popular and useful design
    features. However, designing, constructing and
    planting water features calls for a blend of good
    design balanced and harmonious with the
    surrounding gardens and house together with
    sound technical knowledge. A wildlife pond,
    optimised for invertebrates such as dragonflies
    and damselflies, can be an ecologically
    attractive feature, where space permits. A
    natural swimming pool is reliant on the purifying
    effect of the root systems of certain aquatic
    plant and does not need chlorination, so swimming
    is much more pleasant (and a natural pool will
    pick up quite a bit of solar heat, without being
    artificially heated).

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  • Reed Beds
  • Reed beds provide an ideal medium for cleaning
    dirty water, where space is available, and can
    achieve a high discharge quality. They have the
    advantage of being aesthetically pleasing, very
    low maintenance, and providing an attractive
    habitat for invertebrates such as dragonflies and
    damselflies. A reed bed can be subtly integrated
    with ponds and other water features, mitigating
    the area needed. This provides a good
    opportunity for saving and storing grey water -
    wastewater from showers, baths, washbasins (and
    sometimes washing machines and kitchen sinks)
    which can be reused once treated, either for
    garden irrigation or in the home. (Untreated
    grey water may be unsuitable for long term
    irrigation, depending on its source.) Reed beds
    also have an important role to play in
    attenuating storm water flows, as part of the
    drainage strategy on larger sites.

4
  • Water Conservation
  • Rainwater capture and storage is a
    straightforward way of reducing drinking water
    consumption, either for use in the home or for
    irrigation (although the water supply isnt
    necessarily as reliable or consistent as grey
    water). The design, function and location of any
    rainwater harvesting system should ideally be
    considered early in the landscape design process,
    and the specification and installation may be
    usefully included within the landscape works
    scope, rather than being retrofitted at a later
    date.

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  • Drainage
  • Many gardens, especially those on poor draining
    soil, suffer from water logging during wet winter
    periods. The problem is often made worse by
    recent construction work, where soil has been
    compacted by builders' vehicles. Aside from soil
    remediation, and assuming the cause is not
    attributable to a high water table, some form of
    drainage may be necessary. This can generally be
    routed to a suitably sized soak away (recent
    regulatory changes discourage discharge directly
    to watercourses). Consideration should also be
    given to drainage of paved areas such as patios
    and driveways. Drainage design, and compliance
    with the SUDS regulations, is a standard
    consideration in our garden and landscape design
    process. For more details visit Garden Design
    Wiltshire website.
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