At a Glance

Use of on-site woody material in a three-mile stream restoration yields improved ecological function and habitat for a youth camp and TMDL credits for a state agency.

Project Description

Nestled in 140 wooded acres near Annapolis, MD, Camp Barrett is a youth camp designed to help young people of all backgrounds experience outdoor adventure and fun. Operated by the Elks Association of Maryland, Delaware, and the District of Columbia, the camp features multiple recreational fields and facilities, a swimming pool, hiking trails, and a running stream known as Bacon Ridge Branch.

Over time, Bacon Ridge Branch suffered sedimentation and erosion as a result of regional deforestation and agricultural land use practices. Severely incised, with little habitat and no connection to its floodplain, the stream had become so degraded it blew out a culvert crossing on camp property. The restoration of Bacon Ridge presented an opportunity for the Maryland State Highway Administration to initiate—through a full-service delivery contract with mitigation banking company Greenvest—a project that would yield community benefits while helping the agency achieve its TMDL goals.

As a subcontractor to Greenvest, Biohabitats led the restoration of more than three miles of Bacon Ridge. The project, which had to be designed and fully constructed within an accelerated schedule of two years, also involved the restoration of two smaller, headwater tributaries. Biohabitats’ approach used on-site woody materials to raise the normal baseflow water surface to an elevation just below the floodplain in this Coastal Plain, wood-dominated stream system. Maximizing the use of downed trees and ash trees already vulnerable to the emerald ash borer, the design used engineered log jams, naturally-appearing wood structures that slow down the flow of water, protect streambanks, and provide aquatic habitat. On the smaller, headwater tributary sites, wooden post-and-wattle structures placed in a repetitive fashion also help modify flow in a way that augments headwater wetlands.

Details

Bioregion

Chesapeake/Delaware Bays

Physiographic Province

Western Coastal Plain

Watershed

South River Watershed Basin

Expertise Areas

Ecological Restoration, Research & Development, Water

Owner

Maryland Department of Transportation, State Highway Administration

Location

Annapolis, Maryland, United States

Awards

3rd Place, Best Stream Restoration, Chesapeake Stormwater Network BUBBA Awards (Best Urban BMP in the Bay)

Project Team
  • Environmental Quality Resources
  • Coastal Resources Inc.