Recent upgrades did not help
The electrical equipment and pumps at the 22nd Street pumping station were just about a year old when Ida hit, according to PennDOT’s Stevenson.
That’s because of a $32.6 million modernization project in which PennDOT replaced aging equipment in the four Philly pump stations and one in Bucks County, from 2017 to 2021.
The goal of the project was to update old equipment that had become unreliable, Stevenson said. It did not include raising equipment up higher or expanding the discharge pipe.
PennDOT did improve the redundancy of the 22nd Street pump station during the project, replacing the station’s three pumps with larger ones, so that only two need to run for the station to work at full capacity, while the third acts as a backup. But the modernization project largely rebuilt the pumping station as it was originally designed, Stevenson said.
“We pretty much replace the equipment at location, from what it was,” he said.
However, PennDOT was aware of I-676’s vulnerability to flooding. The portion of the expressway between the Schuylkill River and 15th Street ranks among the top 10% to 1% most historically flood-vulnerable PennDOT road segments, in an extreme weather vulnerability study the agency published in 2017 and updated in 2019.
This is no surprise, given the Vine Street Expressway’s location and elevation.
“If you have low-lying areas, like you have the dip in I-676, or if you’re crossing water where you have a risk of … a waterway overtopping its banks, that’s where you see the biggest risks,” said Virginia Smith, of Villanova.
A plan to prevent future pump failures
PennDOT is working on improving the Vine Street Expressway’s pump system to reduce the risk of future floods like Ida. But renovations are likely still years away.
PennDOT is commissioning a study to further explain why the 22nd Street pump station failed and to make recommendations for how to protect this station, and possibly another a few blocks east.
The study will explore the behavior of the Schuylkill River during Ida and, notably, model future flood risk from the river — a relatively new endeavor for PennDOT.
“We’ve got to harden our assets,” PennDOT spokesperson Brad Rudolph said. “Climate change is no joke.”
Stevenson, with PennDOT, said solutions to protect I-676 could include elevating pump station equipment, building a “river wall” or a “pop-up dam.”
Traver, of Villanova, said the “obvious” answer would be to increase pumping capacity by adding “more pipes and more inlets.”
“But also maybe there is something you can do to stop the water from getting to it,” he said. “Where is that water coming from? … There might be something you would do upstream that would solve the problem.”
This might look like more green stormwater infrastructure to absorb runoff, Traver said, or something that would divert water to another location.
Ben She, an organizer with the urbanist PAC 5th Square, hopes the flooding of I-676 motivates officials to look at the resiliency of other infrastructure — for example, the pumps that keep Philly’s subway system dry.
“This pump … maybe it might be like a harbinger of what’s to come,” he said.