MENDON TOWN HALL CAMPUS GREEN GUIDE

A greener, sustainable, resilient Town center for all residents

“We have been planning for this project for over seven years and many people have contributed to make it to the construction phase. We are so excited to start this project and transform the Town Hall campus. The staff and volunteers working on this project have been amazing and the Horsley Witten Group had the technical skills and expertise to make this project a reality.”

— Kim Newman, Mendon Town Administrator

Project Goals

  • Create More Green Space

    Replace the majority of the impervious pavement and gravel on campus with green areas. Green spaces are not only aesthetically more pleasing to look at, but they can provide wildlife habitat, provide shade and reduce heat island effect, and help to treat, store, and infiltrate stormwater. Adding more canopy trees to the campus also brought this site back to its historic roots.

  • Install Green Stormwater Infrastructure (GSI)

    “Green stormwater infrastructure is an approach to water management that protects, restores, or mimics the natural water cycle. It incorporates both the natural environment and engineered systems to provide clean water, conserve ecosystem values and functions, and provide many benefits to people and wildlife” (American Rivers). The project set out to use of many different types of GSI on site to serve as an example to Town residents and others on how stormwater management can be implemented in a variety of ways.

  • Use Low Impact Development (LID)

    LID is a “management approach and set of practices that can reduce runoff and pollutant loadings by managing runoff as close to its source(s) as possible. LID includes overall site design approaches (such as holistic design and integrated management practices) and individual small-scale stormwater management practices that promote the use of natural systems for infiltration, evapotranspiration and the harvesting and use of rainwater” (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency). LID recognizes stormwater as a resource and capitalizes on the co-benefits of managing it close to its source, including recreational, habitat, and air quality benefits.

Massachusetts Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness Program Action Grant

The Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness grant program (MVP) provides support for cities and towns in Massachusetts to begin the process of planning for climate change resiliency and implementing priority projects. The state awards communities with funding to complete vulnerability assessments and develop action-oriented resiliency plans. Communities who complete the MVP program become certified as an MVP community and are eligible for MVP Action Grant funding and other opportunities.

Mendon became certified as a MVP community in 2018. Mendon applied for and received an action grant to cover the design costs and part of the construction costs of this Town Hall Campus Restoration project.

Click here to learn more about the Massachusetts Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness Program.

The project had four phases from start to completion, see below for a description of each phase.

  • Collect Information

    The project started with the collection of important information on the site that would influence the design of the site improvements, such as soil conditions.

  • Design Improvements

    Understanding the site opportunities and challenges, the project developed an innovative design for the campus, incorporating GSI and LID approaches.

  • Collect Feedback

    With the design on paper, the project sought feedback from Town Committees, such as Planning Board and Historic District Commission, and the public.

  • Build It

    Construction has begun in July 2022 and it is expected to be complete in fall 2022. Watch out for more information to be posted when construction is complete.

  • Before Project Aerial

    This aerial image was taken of the Town Hall Campus site in 2021. Check out all that pavement (impervious cover) on the site!

  • After Project Rendering

    This rendering shows what the campus will look like when the project is complete. Check back at this website to see more photos of the site post-construction.

Acknowledgements

 

This project was made possible thanks to the contributions of the following people and entities: Dan Byer, Director of Parks and Recreation; Horsley Witten Group, Inc.; Jack Hunter, Town Planner; Bill Kessler, Fire Chief; Hillary King, MVP Regional Coordinator; Dave Kurczy, Police Chief; Anne Mazar, Land Use Committee; Kim Newman, Town Administrator; Kathy Schofield, Mendon Historical Commission; Alan Tetreault, Highway Surveyor.