Writer: Paul Schattenberg, 210-859-5752, paschattenberg@ag.tamu.edu

Contacts: Dr. John Jacob, 832-671-8171, jjacob@tamu.edu

Mary Carol Edwards, 281-989-5517, mcedwards@tamu.edu

HOUSTON – A multifaceted project to help reduce flooding and provide recreation for  thousands of residents of Clear Lake City has received the 2018 Excellence in Green Infrastructure Award.

Texas A&M AgriLife entities have been major participants in developing Exploration Green Nature Park, located about a mile from the Johnson Space Center. Exploration Green was selected to receive the award through the 2018 Excellence in Green Infrastructure awards program. The program is a partnership of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and National Association of Flood and Stormwater Management Agencies, or NAFSMA.

“Exploration Green transformed  an out-of-use golf course into a 200-acre nature park and stormwater detention facility,” said Dr. John Jacob, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service specialist with the recreation, park and tourism sciences department of Texas A&M University in College Station. “For more than a decade we have been involved in the planning and implementation of actions to repurpose this golf course and surrounding area into a green space with water detention features and recreational areas.”  

Jacob, a Houston resident, said the wetlands in Exploration Green were designed to detain and slow floodwaters and clean the runoff from 95 percent of the storms that occur in the community. Additional provisions were added for a walking trail, lake, wetlands areas and other features.

The award was announced earlier this month at the NAFSMA annual conference in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

According to coordinators, the Green Infrastructure Awards Program was designed to recognize and spotlight stormwater management projects throughout the country that are advancing and innovating green stormwater infrastructure techniques.

“The 178-acre golf course ran alongside large drainage ditches constructed by the original developer, providing a perfect setting for accommodating additional runoff,” Jacob said. “The first phase of Exploration Green was about 80 percent completed when Hurricane Harvey hit and the detention area held enough stormwater runoff that even houses that habitually flooded with  just 5 to 10 inches of water storms didn’t flood with the 45 or so inches that came with Harvey. This project shows that Houston can build developments that don’t flood.”

John Branch, board president of the Clear Lake City Water Authority, which owns Exploration Green, said this kind of detention, combined with the wetlands and native landscapes and nature trails is what real resilience is all about.

“The involvement of the Texas A&M through its Texas Community Watershed Partners was critical to the success of the overall project,” he said.

Mary Carol Edwards, AgriLife Extension stormwater wetland program specialist affiliated with TCWP, said the project is being developed in five phases, with the first phase now complete.

Edwards, who grew up in the Clear Lake area, has been working on the stormwater wetlands portion of Exploration Green.

“This will be one of the largest urban stormwater wetlands initiatives ever undertaken in Texas, with nearly 40 acres of wetlands once all five phases at Exploration Green are completed,” she said.

Water quality studies, funded by a grant from the Texas General Land Office Coastal Management Program, will begin in October to monitor and document water quality changes provided by the stormwater wetlands.

Excavation of the park’s second phase is currently underway and will include development of a lake with stormwater wetlands, a mile of hike and bike trails and the reforestation of native trees. All phases of the project are expected to be complete in 2022.

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