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Procuring a Water Treatment Solution Using an Uncommon Method 


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    Procuring a Water Treatment Solution Using an Uncommon Method

    Challenge

    In 2001, the Slinger Village Board wanted to provide their citizens with better drinking water by installing an iron removal plant to remove the 1.6 parts per million (ppm) of iron in its well water supply.  They had been using a sequestering agent to control the iron, but felt that removal was a better solution, as it would reduce the frequency of flushing the mains and provide rust-free water to residents.

    Solution

    The Village decided on a coached design-build approach to allow the involvement of all parties, reduce design and construction time, and reduce overall costs.

    They selected the design-build team of engineering firm McMahon and Associates of Neenah, WI, and contractor Oscar Boldt Construction of Appleton, WI.   The Village conducted a pilot study to ensure feasibility of the design-build teams’ process design.  Proposal requirements were also simultaneously produced.

    Once the pilot study was complete, the design-build team selected General Filter Products of Ames, Iowa, to supply major process equipment.  General Filter worked through its local regional applications engineering/service team, Energenecs, Inc. of Cedarburg, WI.  Working as a team, they finalized the plant’s design, with each party contributing ideas to provide a balance between overall project cost, initial quality and long-term performance.

     “We really liked the team’s creative design proposal,” recalls Dean Otte, Slinger’s village clerk.  “It considered the Village's desire to control cost while providing us with a plant that will perform well for years to come.”

    Design innovations included:

    • installing a backwash waste-holding tank below the filter floor to save space and excavation
    • elevating the plant to gravity discharge from the backwash waste-holding tank
    • using stainless steel filter front piping to minimize painting and reduce maintenance
    • reducing backwash waste flow with a six-cell filter

    Results

    Construction was completed in just six months.  The total project from conception to construction took only 18 months.   According to Dean Otte, having all parties come together at the project’s onset helped bring the system online months earlier, and saved the village several hundred thousand dollars in redundant work.
     
    The iron removal plant works as follows:  The village water supply provides 1,000 gpm from a groundwater well.  Chlorine is added to begin oxidizing the iron and to carry residual disinfection through the treatment system.  Upon entering the plant, the chlorinated water passes through a pressure aerator, where air is injected into the water to oxidize soluble iron.  A 38-ft by 10-ft horizontal pressure filter with anthracite media provides filtration of the iron floc. 

    Since startup, the iron removal system has exceeded the village’s expectations, consistently reducing influent iron from 1.6 ppm to less than 0.1 ppm.  The village water supply is free of rust, and the flushing frequency for the distribution mains has been reduced, saving the village money on operating costs.  A single operator spends approximately one hour per month on routine plant maintenance.

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