From the household to watershed: A cross-scale analysis of residential intention to adopt green stormwater infrastructure


TitleFrom the household to watershed: A cross-scale analysis of residential intention to adopt green stormwater infrastructure
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsColeman, S, Hurley, S, Rizzo, DM, Koliba, C, Zia, A
JournalLandscape and Urban Planning
Volume180
Start Page195
IssueDecember 2018
Pagination195 - 206
Date Published2018/12
KeywordsEnvironmental behavior adoption, Infiltration trenches, Norms, Rain gardens, Residential stormwater management, Social-ecological system
Abstract

Improved stormwater management for the protection of water resources requires bottom-up stewardship from landowners, including adoption of Green Stormwater Infrastructure (GSI). We use a statewide survey of Vermont paired with a cross-scale and spatial analysis to evaluate the influence of interacting spatial, social, and physical factors on residential intention to adopt GSI across a complex social-ecological landscape. Specifically, we focus on how three GSI practices, (“rain garden (bio retention),” “infiltration trenches,” and “actively divert roof runoff to a rain barrel/lawn/garden instead of the street/sewer”) vary with barriers to adoption, and household attributes across stormwater contexts from the household to watershed scale. Private landowners, who may be motivated more by on-site and neighborhood stormwater problems, may gravitate toward practices like infiltration trenches compared with practices (e.g., rain gardens) perceived to serve stormwater function over larger areas. Diversion of roof runoff was found to be more likely to be a part of a larger assembly of green behaviors. Improved stormwater management outcomes at the watershed, town, neighborhood, and household levels depend on adaptive approaches and adjusting strategies along the rural-urban gradient, across the bio-physical landscape, and according to varying norms and institutional arrangements.

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169204618309009
DOI10.1016/j.landurbplan.2018.09.005
Refereed DesignationRefereed
Status: 
Published
Attributable Grant: 
BREE
Grant Year: 
Year3 StatusChanged
Acknowledged VT EPSCoR: 
Ack-No
2nd Attributable Grant: 
RACC
2nd Grant Year: 
2nd_Post_Grant
2nd Acknowledged Grant: 
2nd_Ack-Yes