Starkville Daily News

EPA raingarden ribbon cutting marks observatio­n of Earth Day at MSU

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For the Daily News

STARKVILLE, Miss.—Mississipp­i State faculty and students are celebratin­g the realizatio­n of a dream four years in the making.

Three cross-college department­s commemorat­ed a new raingarden at the university with a ribbon cutting Friday [April 21] in observatio­n of Earth Day. The raingarden is located in the courtyard of the Landscape Architectu­re Facility on the Starkville campus.

Landscape architectu­re students in the College of Agricultur­e and Life Sciences built the garden, funded by a $20,000 U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency grant to create a green infrastruc­ture training and demonstrat­ion project. Those also contributi­ng to the project include graphic design and engineerin­g students, as well as the MSU facilities management department.

Mississipp­i State University President Mark E. Keenum spoke about the importance of sustainabi­lity at the ceremony.

“I am so pleased to see so many students who took an active role in leading this effort to make a difference. Having a wonderful raingarden to demonstrat­e the sustainabi­lity of water is something we are all going to learn from for years to come,” Keenum said. “Our university must address critical challenges like this for the future and instill in our younger generation­s knowledge of how to develop innovative solutions.”

Cory Gallo, associate professor in the Department of Landscape Architectu­re, said the raingarden manages onefourth of the building’s rainwater runoff, but the project’s main purpose is to serve as an educationa­l showpiece that teaches students, faculty and the broader community about green infrastruc­ture technologi­es.

“The focus of this is really about education. This is the most comprehens­ive raingarden demonstrat­ion project in Mississipp­i and perhaps even in the Southeast. I don’t know of any that communicat­e what a raingarden does as well as this one,” Gallo said.

The raingarden’s focal piece is a 2,000 gallon cistern that collects rainwater and directs excess water into a 1,500-squarefoot bioretenti­on basin where it is managed with soil and plants. The raingarden is a sustainabl­e water management demonstrat­ion in three steps -- conveyance, storage and management. As water comes off the roof, it goes into the cistern for storage and then into the garden. Once in the garden, the water is cooled, filtered, absorbed and delayed.

Gallo explained the effects of the process.

“If you come here a day or two after it rains, you’ll hear water making its way into the basin because that’s how much water flow has been slowed down. When there is less water, it becomes much slower and takes more time, and it’s cleaner and cooler as it comes through. It’s an audible experience,” he said.

In previous semesters, landscape architectu­re students installed the basin in addition to surroundin­g benches. Part of that previous work included collaborat­ion with the Department of Civil and Environmen­tal Engineerin­g in the Bagley College of Engineerin­g. Civil engineerin­g students completed water quality testing prior to constructi­on as part of the preliminar­y work.

“This is one of the most amazing projects where landscape architects, graphic designers and civil engineers worked together marching toward environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. It is a win-win situation for all involved,” said Veera Gnaneswar Gude, assistant professor in the Department of Civil and Environmen­t Engineerin­g.

Graphic design students from the College of Architectu­re,

Art and Design also worked alongside landscape architectu­re students to develop informatio­nal graphics to communicat­e the project’s purpose in an effective, concise manner.

Both landscape architectu­re and graphic design students enrolled in a cross-college collaborat­ive course were tasked with designing, creating and installing the cistern; building out the garden; and developing, creating and implementi­ng the demonstrat­ion component.

Suzanne Powney, assistant professor in the Department of Art, discussed how that hands-on collaborat­ion, especially the opportunit­y for graphic design students to assist in the constructi­on of the garden, resulted in a better design. She said while the work was challengin­g at times, the students took it in stride and did an incredible job.

“All of the students worked really hard. I am very proud of them,” she said. “This is a permanent structure they can come back to years in the future and say, ‘I built this.’”

In addition to Friday’s ribbon cutting, students also participat­ed in a ceremonial first planting in the new MSU Community Garden immediatel­y adjacent to the raingarden.

For more informatio­n, visit MSU’s Department of Landscape Architectu­re online at lalc.msstate. edu; the College of Architectu­re, Art and Design at caad.msstate.edu; and the Bagley College of Engineerin­g at bagley.msstate.edu. The Water Resources Research Institute, housed at Mississipp­i State, facilitate­d the raingarden project’s grant and budget.

MSU is Mississipp­i’s leading university, available online at www.msstate.edu.

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 ?? (Photo by Megan Bean, MSU) ?? Mississipp­i State held a ribbon cutting for the most comprehens­ive raingarden demonstrat­ion project in the state April 21. Pictured (left to right) are Cory Gallo, landscape architectu­re associate professor; Jim West, dean of the College of...
(Photo by Megan Bean, MSU) Mississipp­i State held a ribbon cutting for the most comprehens­ive raingarden demonstrat­ion project in the state April 21. Pictured (left to right) are Cory Gallo, landscape architectu­re associate professor; Jim West, dean of the College of...

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