Section 1

Overview of Small-Scale Green Infrastructure

Small-scale GI remains the main site-level stormwater toolkit in both the 2023 and 2026 sources. The GI fact sheets in both editions frame compliance around three linked ideas: manage runoff close to its source, distribute BMPs throughout the site, and stay within the drainage-area limits attached to the qualifying BMPs.

The Chapter 9 family stays materially stable across both manuals. Cisterns, dry wells, grass swales, green roofs, GI-qualified manufactured treatment devices, pervious paving systems, small-scale bioretention systems, small-scale infiltration basins, small-scale sand filters, and vegetative filter strips all remain part of the small-scale conversation. The sharper claim that 2026 removed Chapter 9.5 and 9.9 from Chapter 9 is not supported by the source chapters themselves.

Sources: 2023 and 2026 GI fact sheets; 2023 BMP 9.1-9.10; 2026 BMP 9.1-9.10.
BMP TypePrimary RoleKey Limit or ConditionSource-Backed Note
CisternsStorage for reuseMust empty within 72 hoursReuse demand is based on the lowest three consecutive days of need.
Dry WellsRoof-runoff infiltration1-acre maximum contributory drainage areaChapter applies to clean roof runoff, not general paved-area inflow.
Pervious PavingFiltered storage with infiltration or underdrainAdditional inflow area limited to 3:1Only infiltrating systems meet groundwater recharge.
Small-Scale BioretentionVegetated treatment with infiltration or underdrain2.5-acre maximum contributory drainage areaRain gardens, planters, islands, trenches, and tree pits are part of the same family.
GI MTDsCertified small-footprint GI treatment2.5-acre maximum contributory drainage areaBoth editions limit Chapter 9.5 to the GI-qualified subset of MTDs.
Small-Scale Sand FiltersInfiltrating small-scale sand filtration2.5-acre maximum contributory drainage areaThe underdrained type does not meet the GI definition and is excluded from Chapter 9.9 in both editions.
Green RoofsRoof-area storage and evapotranspirationNo maximum contributory drainage area limitationRunoff from other structures should not be directed onto the green roof.
Section 2

Design Characteristics of Small-Scale GI BMPs

The chapter family is broad, but the design logic is not generic. The source-backed comparison is BMP-specific and configuration-specific, especially for practices that can either infiltrate or discharge through underdrains.

GI family anchor

Small-Scale Bioretention Systems

Chapter 9.7 | 2023 and 2026

Both editions describe small-scale bioretention as a vegetated soil-bed system that may infiltrate into subsoil or discharge through an underdrain. The manuals also treat rain gardens, stormwater planters, stormwater islands, downspout planter boxes, street trenches, bioswales, and enhanced or continuous tree pits as forms of the same family.

Drainage Limit2.5-acre maximum contributory drainage area
InflowDistributed across the surface; multiple units must be proportioned to receive adequate flow
WQDS Depth12-inch maximum depth in a flat-bottom system
Drain Time72 hours maximum
RechargeOnly infiltrating systems count for groundwater recharge
Two configurations

Pervious Paving Systems

Chapter 9.6 | 2023 and 2026

Pervious paving remains a Chapter 9 system with either an infiltrating or underdrained storage bed. The manuals keep the design focus on surface permeability, storage bed sizing, and the relationship between additional inflow area and pervious surface area.

Inflow LimitAdditional inflow area may not exceed 3 times the pervious surface area
Quality Role80% TSS when the full Water Quality Design Storm is treated without overflow
Drain Time72 hours maximum
SHWT1 foot below the storage bed for underdrained systems; 2 feet for infiltrating systems
RechargeOnly infiltrating systems meet groundwater recharge
Roof-runoff GI

Cisterns and Dry Wells

Chapters 9.1 and 9.2 | 2023 and 2026

Both chapters keep these BMPs tied to source-control logic. Dry wells are described as roof-runoff infiltration structures, while cisterns are beneficial-reuse systems that depend on actual reuse demand and timely drawdown.

Dry Wells1-acre maximum contributory drainage area; clean roof runoff only; hydraulic impacts must be assessed
CisternsMust empty within 72 hours and be sized around the lowest three consecutive days of reuse demand
OverflowMixed overflow that becomes subject to quality rules must be treated downstream
Filtered Chapter 9 treatment

GI MTDs and Small-Scale Sand Filters

Chapters 9.5 and 9.9 | 2023 and 2026

These chapters are where the unsupported reclassification story breaks down. Both editions keep Section 9.5 for GI-qualified MTDs, and both editions keep Section 9.9 for the GI-qualifying small-scale sand filter treatment while excluding the underdrained type from that chapter.

GI MTDs2.5-acre limit; 80% TSS when sized under Department certification
Sand Filters2.5-acre limit; underdrained type does not meet the GI definition and is not included in Chapter 9.9
PretreatmentRequired for small-scale sand filters
Roof-area retention

Green Roofs

Chapter 9.4 | 2023 and 2026

Green roofs remain a distinct Chapter 9 practice built around roof-area storage and evapotranspiration. Their design logic is different from subsoil infiltration BMPs, but the manuals continue to show them working alongside other Chapter 9 practices.

Drainage AreaNo maximum contributory drainage area limitation
Runoff SourceShould receive only direct precipitation on the vegetated roof area and adjacent walkways
IntegrationMay be paired with dry wells, cisterns, rain gardens, and pervious paving
Distributed vegetated practices

Grass Swales and Vegetative Filter Strips

Chapters 9.3 and 9.10 | 2023 and 2026

These open vegetated practices remain part of the small-scale Chapter 9 family, but their role depends on their actual chapter criteria and site configuration. They fit the distributed, close-to-source GI logic of the fact sheets without collapsing into the same hydraulic story as dry wells or bioretention.

RoleConveyance, filtering, pretreatment, and limited infiltration depending on configuration
Reading TipUse the chapter-specific criteria rather than importing blanket credit assumptions from other BMPs
Section 3

GI Performance and Stormwater Treatment Role

The performance story in Chapter 9 is practice-specific rather than a single universal VRC table. Some systems reduce runoff through infiltration, others through reuse or evapotranspiration, and others through tightly bounded small-footprint treatment within the GI drainage-area limits.

BMPRunoff Management PathwaySource-Backed Performance AnchorImportant Qualification
GI MTDsCertified small-footprint GI treatment80% TSSApplies to the GI-certified subset described in Chapter 9.5, not to all MTDs in the broader market.
Pervious PavingFiltered storage with infiltration or underdrain80% TSSQuality rating depends on treating the full Water Quality Design Storm without overflow.
Small-Scale Sand FiltersInfiltrating sand-bed filtration80% TSSChapter 9.9 excludes the underdrained type from the GI chapter treatment.
Small-Scale BioretentionVegetation, soil filtration, and optional infiltration80-90% TSSPerformance depends on soil-bed depth and vegetation selection.
CisternsStorage for reuseNo chapter-wide TSS percentagePerformance depends on actual reuse demand and 72-hour drawdown.
Green RoofsRoof-area storage and evapotranspirationNo chapter-wide TSS percentageThe chapter focuses on roof-area retention and integration with other BMPs.
Section 4

Key Updates Between the 2023 and 2026 Manuals

Main Takeaway
  • The strongest source-backed reading is continuity in the Chapter 9 family, not a dramatic removal of GI topics from Chapter 9.
  • Both editions already distinguish GI-qualified MTDs from the broader non-GI MTD universe.
  • Both editions already exclude the underdrained small-scale sand filter from Chapter 9.9.
  • The 2026 source set makes the small-scale versus large-scale bioretention distinction easier to read by pairing Chapter 9.7 with a separate Chapter 10.1.
Topic20232026Practical Reading
Chapter 9 family Full small-scale family present Full small-scale family still present Continuity is the stronger comparison than a purge or simple move-to-Chapter-11 story.
GI MTDs Section 9.5 already limited to GI-qualified MTDs Section 9.5 still limited to GI-qualified MTDs The real distinction is certification and GI qualification, not disappearance from Chapter 9.
Small-scale sand filters Underdrained type excluded from Chapter 9.9 Underdrained type still excluded from Chapter 9.9 Chapter 9.9 continues to cover the GI-qualifying infiltrating configuration.
Small-scale bioretention Chapter 9.7 keeps a 2.5-acre small-scale limit Chapter 9.7 keeps the same 2.5-acre limit The small-scale family remains stable across both editions.
Large-scale bioretention framing No parallel 2026 chapter split Chapter 10.1 states no contributory drainage-area maximum for large-scale bioretention 2026 makes the small-scale/large-scale boundary easier to read.
Section 5

Practical Implications for Designers and Reviewers

The practical design lesson is to match each Chapter 9 BMP to the compliance function actually being claimed. The same named BMP may support different outcomes depending on whether it infiltrates, discharges through an underdrain, or stores runoff for reuse.

Reviewer Focus

  • Confirm that the selected BMP and configuration match the claimed compliance role, especially for bioretention, pervious paving, sand filters, and GI MTDs.
  • Keep drainage-area limits visible in the report narrative and calculations instead of assuming every Chapter 9 BMP follows the same sizing rule.
  • Where infiltration is claimed, document subsurface suitability, groundwater separation, and the hydraulic impact assessment pathway referenced by Chapter 13.
  • Where reuse is claimed, show how the cistern will empty within the required 72-hour window.
  • Use the GI fact sheet test directly: runoff managed close to its source, BMPs distributed throughout the site, and drainage-area limitations met.