This paper describes the use of street storage systems to prevent combined
sewer surcharging and mitigate basement flooding. A case study approach, ba
sed primarily on two largely implemented street storage systems, is used to
explain the concept through construction and operation aspects of street s
torage systems. Street storage refers to the technology of temporarily stor
ing storm water (in densely urban areas) on the surface -off-street and on-
street-and, as needed, below the surface close to the source. Close to the
source means where the water falls as precipitation and prior to its entry
into the combined, sanitary, or storm sewer system. The idea is to accept t
he full volume of storm-water runoff into the sewer system but greatly redu
ce the peak rate of entry of storm water into the system. System components
include street berms, flow regulators, and surface and subsurface storm-wa
ter storage facilities. By eliminating surcharging in combined sewer system
s, street storage has the potential to cost-effectively and simultaneousy m
itigate basement flooding and combined sewer overflows (CSO). Other possibl
e benefits of street storage are mitigating sanitary sewer overflows (SSO),
eliminating surface flooding, reducing peak flows at wastewater treatment
plants (WWTP), and controlling nonpoint source pollution.