Our Work

CNT

What would a RainReady Midlothian look like? It would be a community where residents and businesses benefit from flood relief in a way that also brings neighborhood beautification, retail activity, jobs, recreation, and habitat conservation.

In order to better...Read more

CNT

Since September 2014, CNT and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) have been working closely with the Village of Midlothian and a variety of community and agency partners to assess the cause and characteristics of chronic urban flooding in...Read more

by CNT

As storms become increasingly destructive, homes and businesses face a heightened risk of urban flooding, even when they aren’t located in formally designated floodplains. CNT’s RainReady program offers innovative, cost-effective solutions to keep properties dry and help communities stay resilient...Read more

Downloadable PDF: 
by Chicago Metropolian Agency for Planning (CMAP) and CNT

In 2012, over 22 billion gallons of Lake Michigan water, worth between an estimated $64 million and $147 million, were lost to leaky, aging infrastructure. CNT and CMAP studied the water loss control techniques used by Lake Michigan water suppliers...Read more

Pages

Topic: Water

Displaying 41 - 50 of 66

Publication

topics: Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Urban Flooding, Water

What would a RainReady Midlothian look like? It would be a community where residents and businesses benefit from flood relief in a way that also brings neighborhood beautification, retail activity, jobs, recreation, and habitat conservation. In order to better understand Midlothian’s flood risk,...

view Publication »

Publication

topics: Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Urban Flooding, Water

Since September 2014, CNT and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) have been working closely with the Village of Midlothian and a variety of community and agency partners to assess the cause and characteristics of chronic urban flooding in Midlothian, a southwest suburb of Chicago. Data has...

view Publication »

Project

topics: Climate, Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Housing, Sustainable Economic Development, Transportation, Water

Working with prime contractor Duany Plater-Zyberk, we developed an EcoDistrict plan for financing and building infrastructure to support transit zones throughout the city for the Reinvent Phoenix project.

view Project »

Project

topics: Climate, Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Urban Flooding, Water

Green infrastructure is a network of decentralized stormwater management practices, such as green roofs, trees, rain gardens and permeable pavement, that can capture and infiltrate rain where it falls, reducing stormwater runoff and improving the health of surrounding waterways.

view Project »

Project

topics: Water

Every single day, more than six billion gallons of expensive, treated water is simply lost. Why? Crumbling infrastructure. Leaky, aging pipes and outdated systems are wasting roughly 14 percent of America’s daily water consumption.

view Project »

Project

topics: Climate, Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Housing, Sustainable Economic Development, Transportation, Water

EcoDistricts are the cutting edge of sustainability solutions that use a district scale to achieve greater impact. They link energy, transportation, water, and land use in an integrated, efficient resource system.

view Project »

Project

topics: Climate, Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Housing, Urban Flooding, Water

By managing stormwater on-site with plants, trees, and grasses, green infrastructure provides a suite of cost-effective ecological and quality of life benefits not associated with conventional stormwater infrastructure.

view Project »

Publication

topics: Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Housing, Urban Flooding, Water

As storms become increasingly destructive, homes and businesses face a heightened risk of  urban flooding, even when they aren’t located in formally designated floodplains. CNT’s RainReady program offers innovative, cost-effective solutions to keep properties dry and help communities stay resilient...

view Publication »

Project

topics: Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Urban Flooding, Water

Since 2012, we’ve developed RainReady strategies for homeowners and communities to address urban flooding.

view Project »

Publication

topics: Water

In 2012, over 22 billion gallons of Lake Michigan water, worth between an estimated $64 million and $147 million, were lost to leaky, aging infrastructure. CNT and CMAP studied the water loss control techniques used by Lake Michigan water suppliers and found that over the last several years, 21% of...

view Publication »

Pages