C-38 Dinner Creek Stormwater Detention Basin U520-01-00

C-38 Dinner Creek Stormwater Detention Basin U520-01-00
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Recent Actions

July 19, 2022 - Harris County Commissioners Court approved purchase of a tract of land in support of this project.

December 15, 2020 - Harris County Commissioners Court authorized the continued excavation and removal services for this project.

May 19, 2020 - Harris County Commissioners Court authorized a $850,246 agreement for design, bidding, and construction phase engineering services in support of construction for this project.

February 11, 2020 - Harris County Commissioners Court initiated the Dinner Creek Stormwater Detention Basin project, accepted a conceptual design report, and authorized an engineering firm to proceed with final design of this project on behalf of the Flood Control District.

October 8, 2019 – Harris County Commissioners Court authorized an agreement with an engineering firm for an additional $183,009 for engineering services in support of this project 

September 13, 2016  Harris County Commissioners Court authorized a $799,395 agreement with an engineering firm for design, bidding and construction stage engineering services in connection with this project

Project Description

This project will expand a stormwater detention basin located east of Greenhouse Road on Dinner Creek, a tributary of Langham Creek in the Addicks Reservoir watershed of northwest Harris County. The stormwater detention basin will also be converted from a dry-bottom basin to a wet-bottom basin and modifications will be made to the intake and discharge structures; the discharge structure will allow additional retention capabilities through use of gates. Stormwater detention basins generally reduce flooding risk by providing additional temporary stormwater storage volume during heavy rain events and releasing the water back to the receiving creek or bayou when the water level in the receiving system has receded. The goal of the project is to reduce flooding risk in the surrounding area, particularly for the Yorktown Villas subdivision located downstream of the project.

Location

The project is located east of Greenhouse Road on Dinner Creek, a tributary of Langham Creek in the Addicks Reservoir watershed of northwest Harris County.

Stage

This project is in the DESIGN stage. The Dinner Creek Stormwater Detention Basin was originally excavated by a subdivision developer as a dry-bottom basin with three distinct basin cells and is now owned and maintained by the Flood Control District. The Conceptual Design Report was finalized in the Fall of 2019 and the plan was presented to the public on October 10, 2019. The proposed project ultimate condition will include four wet-bottom basin cells. The design of the project is in progress; design of the first stage of the project that includes the southern basin cells and revised structures is near completion. The second stage of the project that includes the northern basin cells is soon to begin design efforts. Advertising for the construction stage is on hold as the Flood Control District locates additional funding. There is an on-going excavation and removal contract between Flood Control District and a general contractor to help reduce the total cost of the project. As of spring 2023, approximately 750,000 cubic yards of soil have been removed from the site.

Bond Listing

Bond Project C-38 is a potential "Partnership" project. Total allocation for this project is currently $15 million on the 2018 Bond Program Project List, of which approximately $11.25 million would be partnership funding, if granted, and $3.75 million would be local costs.

Bond Listing

List of 2018 Bond Projects

Map of the Dinner Creek Stormwater Detention Basin

Project Lifecycle

Every flood damage reduction project is unique. Yet each project begins and ends, with common and predictable milestones along the way. Whether a project moves forward – and how quickly – depends on many factors, including the availability of funding at each milestone, shifting community priorities for flood damage reduction, and other changing circumstances (such as the price of trees or concrete) from year to year.

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