Saint Mary's of the Lake Raingarden

Quick facts:

In October 2011, a 750 square foot raingarden was installed at the St. Mary’s of the Lake Church in White Bear Lake to capture stormwater from the property’s structural and paved surfaces.

Funding:

Project funding was helped in part by a Clean Water Fund grant with the help of the Ramsey Conservation District.

Reason for project:

The raingarden was found in a study used to identify optimal best management projects that would reduce stormwater in the Lambert Creek subwatershed.

Construction:

The Project removed existing and compacted soils to install a 12” layer of amended soils in the infiltration basin, surrounded with a retaining wall. The inlet features an 8 cubic foot pretreatment chamber to collect sediment and objects from entering the basin, simplifying maintenance.

Results:

The basin has proved to effectively capture and infiltrate stormwater from St. Mary’s of the Lake Church, and the native vegetation has grown in well and continues to flourish.

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Whitaker Pond Biochar Stormwater Filter

A surface water filter targeting pollutants that enter Lambert Creek during high water levels.

Goodwill Development & Wetland Mitigation

This commercial development took place on a property with a historically degraded wetland, and includes a proactive stormwater plan that benefits the watershed.

Lambert Lake Pond and Meander

An effort to restore floodplain storage, sediment dispersal, and treat high E. coli levels.

Lambert Creek/Ditch 14 Maintenance

Ditch 14/Lambert Creek maintenance activities.

Ditch 14/Lambert Creek Engineering: Historic & Current Efforts

A description and supporting documents for the historical conditions of Lambert Creek/Ditch 14 and its branch ditches

Lambert Creek E. coli Source Study

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