Storm Drai
nage Design
The responsibility of the Storm Drainage Design Section of the Engineering Division is to improve
the effectiveness of the storm drainage system within the City of Albuquerque
and to safeguard the quality of the storm water runoff discharging into Rio Grande.
This Section oversees the planning, design and installation of storm water
control systems and monitors the quantity and quality of the storm water runoff.
Storm Drainage Design also provides guidance and training to local engineers, planners
and contractors in the planning and implementation of storm water quality
control measures for construction projects installed within the City of Albuquerque.
In October, City of Albuquerque voters overwhelmingly approved the General Obligation Bond Package. To see the Storm Drainage projects these bonds support, click here. To see the Storm Drainage Decade Plan, click here.
2008 Projects
- Odelia Storm Drain (Wilson & Co.,
NM Underground)..........................................................$0.76M
- Broadway & Odelia AQ-Pond (Wilson & Co.,
NM Underground)...........................................................$0.44M
- Kinley, Broadway to Edith, Storm Drain (Wilson & Co.,
NM Underground)..........................................................$0.91M
- Tingley Park Reconstruction (Wilson & Co., A.S.Horner)..............$3.90M
- Wyoming/La Cueva Arroyo Box Culvert (Resources Tech)............$0.54M
- Moon Storm Drain, Central to I-40 (Boh & Hust)........................$1.42M
- San Mateo Pl. Storm Drain North I-40with NMDOT (Boh & Hust)...$1.38M
- San Mateo/Hahn Storm Drain (Smith Eng)................................$1.07M
- Pump Station Rehabilitation...................................................$1.00M
- Coal Storm Drain Rehab. And Extention....................................$1.10M
- San Pedro Storm Drain North Albuquerque Acres........................$1.00M
- Hotel Circle/Morris North of Lomas..........................................$1.30M
- District 3 Storm Drain Improvements.......................................$4.00M
2007 Projects
2006 Projects Completed
- Vineyard Ridge/Barstow Storm Rehab (TLC)...................................$30,000
- 47th & West Central Storm Drain Rehab Phase II (Larkin, NM Underground)...... $1.4M
- Eubank Storm Drain Outfall/Tijeras Arroyo........................................$80,000
- Manzano Mesa Detention Pond..........................................................$4,500
- Arroyo del Oso Park.............................................................................$10,000
- Amole Arroyo Phase 3 (Mark Goodwin, Salls Bros.).......................$2.6M
- Bryan Street Drainage Improvements................................................$9,000
- Palo Alto Madison Street Drainage Improvements..........................$16,000
- Hahn Arroyo Improvement...................................................................$32,000
- Embudo Arroyo Improvement.............................................................$12,000
These projects may include additional funding from other
than city CIP


2005 Projects Completed
- NMDOT coordination on I-40 Westbound ............................................$635,742
- West Mesa Diversion, Phase IID (Salls Brother / Smith) ....................$2,027,293
- Gibson Blvd. Drainage with Road Rehab (D. Montoya) (P.B) ............$950,000
- Central/Churchill Diversion (Condore) (Larkin) .....................................$1,281,436
- South Broadway/San Jose Rehab. (AEI) Thompson) ..........................$989,985
- Domingo Baca, NDC to Washington (A.S. Horner) (Smith) ................$1,803,871
- San Pedro Collectors at N. Pino Arroyo (Salls Brother) (Thompson) .$719,334
- Boca Negra Arroyo Crossing at Tesuque (AUI) (RTI) ..............................$493,172
- Eubank Claremont to Comanche (NMUI) (URS) ....................................$3,144,205
- N. 2 nd Street Storm Drain, Headingly to Griegos (NMUI) (Larkin) ......$3,739,829


2005 City Wide Small Projects
In 2005 the City of Albuquerque managed 21 smaller drainage projects totaling $138,083
2004 Projects Completed
- 47th Street and Central Phase 1 (RMCI, Larkin).....................................$912,672
- Wyoming, Embudo to Northeastern (Salls Bros., URS)..........................$2.4M
- Clifford Channel Reconstruction (RMCI, BHI)...........................................$1.052M
- Bear Arroyo west of Wyoming (D. Montoya, ASCG)...............................$535,189
- Highland Storm Drain Phase 3 (JR Hale, ASCG)....................................$1.2M
- Louisiana Storm Drains with I-40 Bridge...................................................$600,000
- Pino at Wyoming LOMR..............................................................................$350,000
Reports
Storm Drainage Library: Click here to see the list.
Rainfall, Runoff and Water Quality Data Report for Albuquerque 2003-2004 [.pdf]
Rainfall, Runoff and Water Quality Data Report for Albuquerque 2002-2003 [.pdf]
The Mid Rio Grande Conservancy District Microbial Tracking Report [.pdf]
City of Albuquerque Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System MS4 Permit [.pdf]
The AMAFCA/Albuquerque MS4 Floatable and Gross Pollutant Study [.pdf]
Storm Water Analysis
The City of Albuquerque Antibiotic Resistance Analysis of Contamination
in Storm Water
[See Text of the
Analysis [pdf, 3.4 mb]; [See
Maps [pdf, 4.7 mb]; [See
Appendices [pdf, 2.36 mb]
report relates to Bacterial Source Tracking
(BST) of Albuquerque's storm water.
The BST methodology is used to determine
the sources of fecal bacteria in environmental
samples (e.g. from human,
livestock, or wildlife origins). BST is also called fecal source tracking
and/or fecal typing.
As part of our draft Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Permit (MS4) with
the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency there is on-going storm water
quality sampling. The sampling is done by the
United States Geological
Survey (USGS) at locations throughout Albuquerque to test the storm
water
quality that discharges to the Rio Grande (see
MS4 Storm Water Quality Sampling USGS Fact Sheet
[pdf, 794k]
).
This is done as a joint effort with the Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo
Flood Control Authority (AMAFCA) , New Mexico Department of Transportation
(NMDOT), University of New Mexico,
and the City of Albuquerque .
Scoop the Poop to Protect the Rio Grande
Control Your Trash and Keep the Rio Grand
