Trends Winter 2010 | Seite 2

huge thundercloud parked itself over the City of Cheyenne, Wyoming, on the evening of August 1, 1985, dumping a record 6 inches of rain in three hours. Dry Creek, normally a small stream at its wettest, quickly turned into a surging river. When the night was over, 12 people died – including seven children – in the surging floodwaters. Beyond the devastating loss of life, damage totals exceeded $61 million. Cheyenne, which normally averages 15 inches of rain a year found itself unequipped to handle such an overpowering flood. The storm set state precipitation records. Eleven of the 12 people who died drowned in the Sheridan Reach of Dry Creek, which runs along a primarily residential area in the Buffalo Ridge subdivision in the north part of the city. During the storm, crossings were overtopped, and motorists who drove around barricades were swept into the surging floodwaters. The water pressure removed tops of sewer lines, supercharging the system and washing raw sewage into people’s homes. Cheyenne City Engineer Doug Vetter, PE, was living in Laramie, a city west of Cheyenne, when the storm hit. “During the storm, I happened to be up on a mountain between Laramie and Cheyenne. I saw the large cloud and knew it didn’t look good. But I had no idea what was happening,” recalled Vetter, who ended up helping friends and family clean up their damaged homes. “I wasn’t there for the storm, but I saw the aftermath.” Determined not to suffer similar destruction caused by the 1985 storm – or even flooding from a lesser storm – the City set out to devise solutions to its flood control issues. In the short term, washed-out crossings and roads were repaired. In 1987, the City developed a master drainage plan that identified $60 million in infrastructure needs. But nothing was done. “There just wasn’t money in the budget for that,” Vetter said. Now, more than two decades later, an innovative solution combined with a $3 million grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has made flood control in Dry Creek’s Sheridan Reach a reality. The idea for the project began in 2002, when Gene MacDonald, PE, CFM, now manager of Ayres Associates’ Cheyenne office, was the surface water drainage engineer for the City of Cheyenne. At that time, the City was revisiting its 1987 master drainage plan to reprioritize problem areas. Dry Creek’s Sheridan Reach was identified as the No. 1 hazard. At first, the proposed solution was to fix the conveyance system by improving crossings to handle a 100-year flood. “The problem is, you can never build (the conveyance system) big enough,” MacDonald said. “Continued urbanization, combined with better precipitation records, generally result in higher peak discharges.” This solution also would have cost the City approximately $10 million. This kind of fix was in line with conventional engineering solutions. MacDonald said all recommendations in the master drainage plan involved getting water out of the City quickly. “This typically was the solution of choice for the last generation of engineers,” he said. Now other solutions involve water quality and attenuation of peak discharges through use of detention features. “It’s no longer a good idea just to divert the water and get it out of the way as fast as you can.” One day, MacDonald had an epiphany while staring at a huge map of the City’s drainage basins in the City’s municipal building: “I was looking at the map and I said, ‘You know, we have all this open area here; we can just divert it.’ ” Long ago the federal government granted a 14-square-mile area comprising A Going flow with the Diverting creek through undeveloped area keeps Cheyenne residents protected from floods By Tawny Quast TRENDS |3