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Vermont
Rest Area Uses Green Wastewater Treatment System
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| The greenhouse (pictured) at Vermont's busiest interstate highway rest area contains a Living Machine wastewater treatment system. (Photo by Living Technologies) |
In 1985, the state started
a program of connecting a rest area's wastewater to a municipal system when
the rest area was rehabilitated. However, the cost of piping sewage from the
Guilford center 11 kilometers (seven miles) to Brattleboro, the nearest community,
was prohibitive.
The state tried other alternatives, including constructing two more leachfields
at the rest area and installing microflush toilets that operated with compressed
air and required very little water. Neither solved the problem.
"We often had 3,000 people come through the building in a single day and
had toilets flushing every few seconds," Foster said. "The microflush
technology was so touchy that the toilets were breaking down all the time."
The breakdowns resulted in long lines of people waiting to use the restrooms,
and complaints were made to the governor's office.
By the early 1990s, the operators of the welcome center were constantly dealing
with swampy standing water, bad odors, and maintenance problems.
"We would have to close things up and call for emergency services from
plumbers and septic services," said Wendy Randall, who has worked as an
information specialist at the center for 19 years.
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| Inside the rest area's wastewater treatment system, plants and animals clean the waste from the water through a series of engineered ecosystems. (Photo by Living Technologies) |
The state leased six portable
toilets during the fall of 1996 to help deal with the influx of visitors during
the busy foliage season, but these drew new complaints. State officials needed
a solution that could be designed and built quickly for the next foliage season.
"We were looking for an alternative because we couldn't continue with that
high level of frustration," said Foster. To further complicate matters,
the welcome center was slated to be replaced by a newer facility in 2000, so
the "quick fix" also needed to be low cost. Tom Leytham, an architect
who had designed other rest areas in the state, suggested the concept of using
a Living Machine to Foster.
"One day, Dick was in my office and said that the governor's office was
getting calls on a daily basis complaining about the port-a-potties at the Guilford
rest area," remembered Leytham. "I told him that I'd heard about Living
Technologies, who had come up with a very elegant, simple solution that cleaned
wastewater through a natural process involving plants." Leytham drove Foster
to South Burlington, Vt., where Living Technologies had installed a Living Machine
to treat municipal wastewater.
"I have a horticultural background and was impressed and started thinking
about applying the technology to the Guilford Welcome Center," said Foster.
In December 1996, in response to an inquiry from state officials, Living Technologies
proposed a sewage-to-reuse system to reduce flows to the leachfields by recycling
treated wastewater back into the restrooms to flush toilets. The Living Machine
could be installed to serve the existing facilities at the Guilford center,
and because the system was a modular design, it could be moved to another rest
area when the center was relocated.
In only eight months, the system was approved by the Vermont Agency of Natural
Resources, funded by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and Vermont Department
of Buildings and General Services, and installed by Living Technologies. The
Living Machine cost approximately $250,000, 90 percent of which was funded by
FHWA and 10 percent by Vermont.
"FHWA is interested in innovative technologies, and we agreed that this
rest area needed a creative solution that didn't fit normal parameters,"
said Mark Richter, an FHWA area engineer. "We also liked the fact that
there would be an opportunity to use the system at another location."
"Living Machines are such a cost-effective alternative," said Foster.
"Typically, the cost to connect to a municipal wastewater treatment plant
can easily exceed a million dollars versus $250,000 for a Living Machine."
The Living Machine was operating in time for the 1997 autumn foliage season.
On Nov. 1, 1999, it was decommissioned when a new Guilford Visitor's Center
opened eight kilometers (five miles) north on I-91. The new center is hooked
into Brattleboro's wastewater treatment system. Foster said the Living Machine
is in storage now, but there are plans to install it next year to solve a similar
wastewater problem at a rest area on I-89 in Sharon, Vt.
How the Living Machine
Works
The Living Machine is a biological system consisting of a series of reactors
housed in high-density polyethylene tanks. Each reactor has a different ecological
environment designed for a specific treatment purpose. This ecological diversity
includes plants, aquatic insects, snails, aquatic worms, and other flora and
fauna.
Sewage from the rest area is treated to Vermont's reuse standards and recycled
to the rest area as flush water in the toilets. The Living Machine was designed
to treat wastewater from up to 4,300 visitors per day. Flows fluctuated with
seasonal and weekend use, averaging 23,000 liters (6,075 gallons) per day and
peaking at 3,785 liters (1,000 gallons) per hour.
At the Guilford Welcome Center, sewage flows to the center's existing septic
tank. Here solids settle, and anaerobic bacteria feed on the waste. Septic tank
effluent is then pumped into two treatment trains located inside a 168-square-meter
(1,800-square-foot) double-glazed greenhouse.
The first treatment tanks in each train are closed aerobic reactors, which remove
odors from the wastewater and metabolize the organic material as microbes consume
the waste in the water. Aerators bubble air through the tanks, keeping their
contents mixed and providing oxygen for waste-eating microorganisms.
Four open aerobic reactors are next. The surface of the wastewater in these
aerated reactors are covered with vegetation. The roots of the vegetation provide
living spaces and oxygen for the microbes consuming the waste.
The seventh tank is a clarifier in which microbial communities are separated
from the treated water. Calm water in the clarifier allows the remaining biological
solids to settle, and those solids are then pumped back to the septic tank for
further digestion.
Ecological fluidized beds (EFBs) provide final "polishing" of the
wastewater. These beds circulate the wastewater through different habitats that
remove organic material and nutrients. The polished water is then disinfected
with a hypochlorine solution, destroying pathogens. In the final step, the water
is dechlorinated, and the reclaimed water is pumped to a holding tank to be
reused to flush toilets in the rest area. Surplus water not needed for reuse
is discharged to the existing leachfield.
On April 29, 1999, Living Technologies Inc. and the state of Vermont received
the 1999 Engineering Excellence "Grand Award" from the American Consulting
Engineers Council of Vermont for the Guilford Welcome Center Living Machine.
The Living Machine was invented by Dr. John Todd, a founder and director of
Living Technologies. The Living Machine has won numerous other environmental
awards, including the Chico Mendes Memorial Award, Teddy Roosevelt Conservation
Award, and Environmental Merit Award given by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
Molly Farrell is a freelance writer living in Burlington, Vt. She specializes in business, law, and environmental issues.
Liz Van der Hoven is an engineer and Tedann Olsen is the marketing manager for Living Technologies Inc. in Burlington, Vt.
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