Wimberley ISD Blue Hole One Water Primary School
What is One Water?
One Water is an intentionally integrated approach to water that promotes the management of all water—drinking water, wastewater, stormwater, greywater—as a single resource. This integrated water management approach can help communities achieve long-term resiliency and reliability, for the benefit of both the environment and the economy.
A One Water approach rethinks how water moves through and is used in a community; it brings stakeholders like developers, community leaders, urban planners, water managers and engineers together with the goal of utilizing water as thoughtfully and efficiently as possible.
One Water School: Wimberley Independent School District
The Wimberley Independent School District (WISD) has built the first One Water school in Texas. The Blue Hole Primary School's One Water design acknowledges the importance of protecting Wimberley’s sensitive water resources, such as Jacob’s Well and Blue Hole, both of which are popular swimming spots whose water source comes from the Trinity Aquifer. The unique campus reduces its water consumption footprint by approximately 90 percent through the implementation of water-wise strategies, such as:
Collecting rainwater and AC condensate for plumbing and irrigation
- Constructing an on-site treatment and reuse system that will allow gray and black water to be recycled
- Installing best management practices (BMPs) such as rain gardens containing native plants, permeable pavers, and other stormwater mitigation strategies to slow down runoff, encourage groundwater recharge, and reduce nonpoint source pollution
- Creating an educational experience for the students with clear pipes and signage
Not only does the one water campus design save water, but it also saves the school district money:
- Annual cost savings relative to standard construction and centralized water/wastewater service are expected to range from $29,000 to $48,000 per year.
- Total cost savings over 30 years to exceed $1,000,000 in 2018 dollars.
- Conservation of 237 acre-feet of groundwater over 30 years. Enough to keep Jacob’s Well Spring flowing at a healthy rate for 143 days!
- An expected rate of 1.5 gallons of water per day per student, compared to 15 gallons per day per student at a standard construction campus.
Project Resources
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Project Documents
Presentations
A One Water Story – Realizing the Environmental and Economic Value of One Water for the Texas Hill Country. Presented at the 2019 EPA Region 6 Stormwater Conference on July 28, 2019 – Denton, Texas.
A One Water School for Wimberley ISD (2019).
A New Primary School for Wimberley ISD. Presented to the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority on March 19, 2019 – Seguin, Texas.
One Water Wimberley Regenerative Development for WISD –Connected by Living Waters (2018).
Documents & Reports
A One Water School For Wimberley ISD
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One Water Resources
To learn more about the concept of One Water, we have provided several resources below:
Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation One Water Report