EPA908 i£V & REGION W° When Denver's new airport opens in 1994, it will be well-equipped to handle the 30 million passengers expected to pass through, each year. The careful design of the nation's newest and-largest airport will be evident in its space-age architecture, park-like setting, and smooth flow of travelers and . aircraft. Less obvious, but perhaps more revolutionary, is the environmental planning that went into the facility—a concept called "pollution prevention." Planning and design for Denver's new airport included many features specifically intended to reduce the amount of pollution generated there. New Thinking Applied at DIA Unlike any previous airport, Denver International Airport (DIA) Includes features specifically intended to reduce the pollution that typically results.from such a mammoth public works project. To help design and implement these features, the regional Environmental . Protection Agency (EPA) office in Denver worked closely with the • - • City and County of Denver and the State of Colorado's. Office of Energy Conservation. An Intergovernmental Persbnnel Act agreement, assigning an EPA scientist to a one-year tour of duty at DIA, made the partnership official. This unique collaboration between federal, state, and local interests has potential for use' across a wide range of projects. Preventing pollution simply makes more economic and environmental sense than traditional "end-of-ther pipe"" or "command-and-control" methods for reducing pollution. This new thinking about pollution reduction was percolating in the regulatory world at the same time that impetus was growing for a new airport in the Denver metropolitan area. Yet there were many obstacles to over- come—the first being the single-focus approach that regulators develop by working on singular aspects of pollu- tion control (e.g.,"air, water, waste, toxics). Integrating pollution preven- tion measures into a $3.2 billion facility covering 53 square miles-of land called for. a "big picture," or "multi-media," approach. While most futurists expect the struggle to reduce pollution to continue- well into the next century, conscious choices made up front to prevent ------- Better air quality, reduced solid waste, and water conservation can ke achieved through careful planning and collaboration among partners. pollution at DIA will help substantially in keeping the new airport's negative .impact to a minimum. Specific Measures to Prevent Pollution Following is a sampling of the pollution prevention measures taken or planned at DIA. Embedding fly ash (unburned fuel particles from nearby coal-fired energy plants) in concrete to be used for run- ways and road surfaces, strengthening them and making them more durable. The use of 180,000 tons of fly ash at DIA will save enough landfill space to accommodate the solid waste of a city of 40,000 people for nine years. >- Collecting and reusing 760 torts of glycol deicing fluids per year, thereby reducing the volume of these fluids sent to wastewater treatment by 95 percent. >- Irrigating airport and surrounding development landscaping with reclaimed wastewater not treated to drinking water levels. Scheduled to begin in 1999, this effort is expected to save 542 million gallons of drinking water per year. >- Conserving energy through design and operation features of the facility. These include a teflon-coated fiber- glass roof to take, advantage of natural light, and the use of natural gas- powered chillers for air conditioning. Despite the numerous energy-conser- vation measures taken, however, DIA will still need to maintain its own central power plant for heating and Cooling. Here, too, pollution prevention will be built in: lovy nitrogen-oxide emitting boilers and tlue gas recircula- tion will keep 90 tons of nitrogen oxide per year from polluting the Denver metro area air. >- Controlling the release of "volatile organic compounds"—smog-forming vapors—through the use of floating roofs, on fuel storage tanks and a, vapor recovery .system at fleet vehicle'fueling stations. These measures will keep an estimated 52 tons of vapors from being released each year. Landscaping with a predominance of the West's own drought-resistant . plants-, especially prairie grasses, to yield water savings in the hundreds of millions of gallons per year. >- Fueling airport fleet vehicles with natural gas rather than gasoline, thereby reducing emissions of carbon monoxide and'nitrogen oxidel Designing and implementing a solid waste plan aimed at cutting waste at its source, and reclaiming and recycling many waste materials with an initial goal of reducing landfill disposal by 16 tons per day. Offering airport employees staggered shifts, compressed.work weeks, and shuttle services to reduce their contribution to auto-related particle emissions by an estimated 7,000 pounds per year. Planning Today for a Better Tomorrow Working collaboratively to prevent •pollution at Denver International Airport was an excellent experience for EPA. Once-Colorado voters approved construction of the new airport, EPA became immediately involved in the planning process by providing advice on using the latest technological tools to minimize DIA's environmental impact.' Not only did EPA learn to apply new thinking and tools to technological challenges, but it also learned a new way to collaborate with those it regulates. This success sets a positive precedent for "pollution prevention by design" to become the normal way of doing business—tomorrow, and into the next century. PREVENTION FOR MORE INFORMATION Please contact: U.S.-EPA Region 8 Office of Policy & Management 999 18th Street, Suite 500 Denver, CO 80202-2466 1-800-227-8917 Printed on recycled paper , with soy-based inks ¦ 1 U S GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1994-840-259 ------- |