Sustainable living › Healthy home › Repair, remodel and maintain safely › Nature-friendly home improvement › Pervious surfaces
Drain the rain. Pervious surfaces, like pervious pavement or pavers, allow rainwater to pass through them and soak into the ground instead of flowing into storm drains. Result: healthier urban waterways.
In cities, rain runs off hard surfaces like streets, patios and driveways and picks up chemicals, litter, bacteria, oil and other pollutants. When polluted rainwater (also called stormwater runoff) drains into our sewer system, streams and rivers it creates a health hazard for people, wildlife, salmon and the rest of the environment.
Using pervious pavers, pavement or material for patios, walkways, driveways and parking areas allows rainwater to soak into the ground before it becomes polluted stormwater runoff and flows into sewers and storm drains. Result: healthier urban waterways.
The biggest advantage to using pervious pavers, pavement or materials instead of traditional asphalt or concrete is this practice improves water quality and protects wildlife habitat by reducing the amount of polluted stormwater runoff that enters sewers, streams and rivers.
Other benefits include:
Pervious concrete
Pervious asphalt
Permeable pavement
Concrete with fly ash
Permeable pavers
Recycled glass pavers
Salvaged clay bricks
Salvaged stone
Wood Chips
Nutshells
Tumbled glass
Corie Harlan
503-797-1764
corie.harlan@oregonmetro.gov