Arcadis Wins Contract to Design Stormwater Flood Protections in Virginia

Arcadis has been awarded an approximate $11.6 million contract by the City of Norfolk, Virginia, to design stormwater infrastructure enhancements to protect Ohio Creek communities against future flooding and continued sea level rise.
The City of Norfolk received a $115 million grant to transform the Ohio Creek Watershed, which followed a winning application to the Department of Housing and Urban Development for funding through its $1 billion National Disaster Resilience Competition. As part of the project, Arcadis will design water management solutions, including:
- Developing a heightened shoreline protection system to prevent high river waters from spilling into neighborhoods and flowing into the stormwater system
- Minimizing shoreline erosion by creating a living shoreline, using rock breakwater and vegetation to decrease wave energy during coastal flooding events while providing ecological habitat and recreational use, such as fishing
- Raising of several roadways to ensure access to the neighborhood during storms and to keep approximately 450 homes out of the path of flood waters
- Capturing and storage of rainfall via residential rain barrels and rain gardens to slow its flow to the stormwater system and subsequently reduce drainage system overflow and flooding
“The city selected Arcadis not only because it’s staffed with experts who understand the unique nature of our flooding challenges and bring innovative and sustainable ideas to the table, but because they believe in what we are trying to accomplish — a resilient coastal community for the future,” said Scott Smith, Coastal Resiliency Manager for the City of Norfolk. “Our aligned vision and people-focused goals aim to develop a thriving, historic waterfront community that doesn’t just adapt to the risk of rising sea levels and changing climates, but learns to live with water for an improved quality of life.”
Arcadis’ resiliency planning approach consists of blending the stormwater infrastructure into the aesthetics and landscape of the community, while increasing resilience to future flooding. Throughout the design phase, solutions will be introduced to manage excess stormwater rather than have it enter the drainage system, such as rain gardens, rain barrels, permeable pavements that soak up the water, and increased stormwater retention areas such as wetland habitats to naturally store stormwater.
“The City of Norfolk is leading the charge to define innovative resiliency and adaptation by reinventing themselves as the model coastal city of the future,” said Arcadis Water President John McCarthy. “By applying our leading-edge techniques for water management, landscape architecture, flood protection and urban design, Arcadis is playing a key role in making this aspiration a reality.”
The Arcadis-led design phase of the project will run through December 2018, with construction activities scheduled to begin in March 2019.
Related News
From Archive

- HDD industry faces challenges as cities push back on fiber drilling disruptions
- 2 workers killed, 1 injured while working on sewer line in Mobile, Ala.
- Tunnel boring continues under Chesapeake Bay for $3.9 billion HRBT Expansion project
- $5.3 billion, 516-mile pipeline to connect Texas to Arizona through New Mexico
- Judge approves construction for key portion of $485 million pipeline in Larimer County, Colo.
- New products: Latest industry developments
- 31 workers rescued after LA tunnel partially collapses
- Ohio Supreme Court rules sewer line location isn’t a ‘defect’ in property dispute
- Faulconer Construction begins rock blasting for water pipeline project in Charlottesville, Va.
- $5.3 billion, 516-mile pipeline to connect Texas to Arizona through New Mexico
Comments