Protect Property Pre-Rain

Protect Property Pre-Rain with These 3 Steps

Updated November 11, 2020. By Oscar Ortega: Even as we hope for rain to combat fire and quench thirsty landscapes, rain isn’t all good news. It brings the possibility of mudslide, debris flow and flood. Here an ounce of prevention is worth a ton of cure.

Safety Note: The following tips assume time to prepare. If you are currently experiencing flooding, please follow the L.A. Fire Department’s general storm safety guidelines: Avoid all waterways – never enter moving water on foot or in a vehicle. This is particularly important in denuded areas. Do not enter the water if you or someone you see someone swept into moving water. Immediately call 9-1-1 and, if possible, throw a rope or some type of flotation device to them. For additional safety tips, visit fire.lacounty.gov, and follow @LACoFD and @LACoFDPIO on Twitter.

Photo: Chris Cimino, City of Sierra Madre


To prepare your property for rain:

  1. Proactively Prevent Slides: Place preventative sandbags to secure slopes. This step may also be wise if you have significant grade changes in topography, either on your property or nearby properties, that direct water toward structures. Sandbags are available at LA County Fire Stations (Locate).
  2. Clear Waterways: Bioswales, gutters, infiltration pits, really anywhere water moves or infiltrates, should be cleared of debris before rain starts.
  3. Inhibit Irrigation: Beyond wasting water, adding irrigation to stormwater can destabilize slopes on your property and elsewhere. Weather-based irrigation controllers are a great way to avoid both this danger and any hassle associated with it. It may seem funny, but this kind of smart irrigation is among the landscape features shown to bring homeowners the greatest joy.

If you have time to think beyond safety, consider:

  1. Saving Rain: Rain barrels can provide valuable supplemental water in dry months, and often there are grants available for their installation.
  2. Reduce Hardscapes: When LA gets rain, it is often in deluges with flows made more dangerous by our preponderance of hardscapes. The more we remove to allow water to sink into the soil, the better.
  3. Plant: California native plants like moving to new homes in the late fall and winter. One of the easiest ways to help these delightful plants establish is to plant them when the extra water they need is falling from the sky!

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Inspire Innovation, Resilience

USGBC-LA Honors FormLA Landscaping Clients, Projects and Friends

December 12, 2019. LOS ANGELES – At its 15th Green Gala, the Los Angeles Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC-LA) recognized two FormLA Landscaping clients and a dear community partner for their innovations and impact.

U.S. Green Building Council Sustainable Innovation Awards recognize exceptional achievement and innovation and affirm a project team’s commitment to a sustainable built environment. Award categories mirror the organization’s LEED certification criteria, they also reflect the LA chapter’s emphasis on good design, community engagement and equity.

Sustainable Innovation Award Winner | 2019 USGBC-LA See More

Thomas Safran Associates | Gateway at Willowbrook

Water Savings – Merit
Health & Wellbeing – Merit
Site Selection – Merit
 
The Gateway at Willowbrook delivers an abundance of nature where LA most needs it. The site, adjacent to the 110 Freeway Willowbrook exit and the Rosa Parks Metro Station, offers a beautiful, walkable entrance to the community. By leaving abundant space for nature, Thomas Safran Associates set the stage for gardens that absorb runoff from the community’s ample hardscapes. Formerly unhoused seniors, and Willowbrook residents more broadly, can expect improved health outcomes as a result of their innovation. Learn More (Video)

The Matloff Family | Matloff Family Residence

Water Savings – Honor

Nestled within the high-end and high water use neighborhood of Windsor Square, the Matloff Family Residence showcases an authentic lush, leafy, low-water look for LA gardens. Rather than hiding water-workhorses, including an expansive bioswale, edible garden and orchard, IdealMow meadow, and permeable hardscapes, they courageously placed these features in the front garden. In doing so, they inspired conversation and proved that a water-saving landscape can enhance curb appeal – and community.

Both of the projects awarded were designed by FormLA Lead Designer Isara Ongwiseth who notes: “It was a joy to work with clients so determined to the sustainability and overall impact of their projects and to see their courage and innovation rewarded.”

J Lopez | LA County Fire Department

Resiliency Award
 
For more than 30 years, J Lopez has improved the resilience of Los Angeles County through research of wildfire and community education. He has been critical to our understanding of the relationship between our building and landscaping decisions and wildfire risk mitigation. Both USGBC-LA and FormLA Landscaping look forward to working together to make Los Angeles safer and more resilient.
 
 
“USGBC-LA is about people, and using community as the theme of our Green Gala this year was not only a great way to honor that, but also to put our communities at the heart of the conversation around sustainability. Our members, who design, build and operate the environments where we spend nearly 90% of our time, do an amazing job of pushing each other to go further each year. These projects and the people who made them happen deserve to be honored to bring more attention to the work they are doing and to drive others to go even further,” shares USGBC-LA Executive Director Ben Stapleton.

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Builder.Media: 9th Annual USGBC-LA Sustainable Innovation Awards

Support Slopes with 3 Steps

Things We Can Do – and Not Do – to Protect LA from the Second Punch

December 10, 2019. By Oscar Ortega: We hope you are fueled by the knowledge that we can expect resilience in the wild spaces and gardens impacted by November fires. While natural disasters can feel overwhelming, there are things we can do to protect one another from the second blow in California’s predictable one-two punch.

Whether impacted by fire or simply living near slopes, we recommend taking three actions now to ensure a safer rainy season.

 
Evaluate and Support Slopes

Dam with sandbags and/or add post and boards as needed on the slope. The intent is not to stop the erosion, but to slow it down. The speed of water and mud movement is what can be very dangerous. Simply slowing its flow can save a home or a life.

For those in areas impacted by fire, please note that re-seeding does not necessarily support slopes and should only be done with expert advice from landscape professionals with firewise landscaping know-how. Timing and species is key to getting this right. If we get it wrong, it can amplify flood danger and create more quick-to-ignite fuel for the following fire season.

Check Waterways and Irrigation

Fire can leave waterways from gutters to bioswales cluttered with debris. It is imperative these areas be cleared and monitored to allow the free flow of water post-fire, even if rain is not in the forecast.
 
Fire can also damage irrigation systems. Turn off irrigation. Check for leaks. While subsurface irrigation will not send up a geyser like an above-ground irrigation system, there are simple ways to detect subsurface leaks as well

A dry river collects and directs rainfall before it can become runoff.

Direct Water

Creating topographical incentives for water to go in a direction that protects lives and property can be smart action – before rain falls. This can be particularly useful if your property has expansive hardscape, including landscapes of gravel and cacti. While dry rivers and bountiful bioswales can take time to construct, even petite divots can be of use in directing water flow.

While there are disasters that can overwhelm the best efforts, a great deal of trouble can be avoided by taking smart, proactive action. We hope this helps keep you safe and dry this holiday season.