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AgdaPkt 2009-07-13 clsd and jnt
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AgdaPkt 2009-07-13 clsd and jnt
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Last modified
7/9/2009 3:45:46 PM
Creation date
7/9/2009 3:08:48 PM
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Template:
CC Index
CC Index - Document Type
Agenda Packet
Meeting Type
Joint
Agency Type
City Council and Redevelopment Agency
Date
7/13/2009
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<br />6.1E <br />Page 10 <br /> <br /> Table 2 <br />Current and Planned Water Supplies (af/yr) <br />Water Supply Sources 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 <br />SFPUC Potable Water 12,768 12,096 12,544 12,768 12,880 12,992 <br />Purchases ("Best Estimate") t <br />Redwood City Recvcled Water 30 922 1,178 1,398 1,695 1,995 <br />Transfers/Exchanaes in or out 0 0 0 0 0 0 <br />Desalination 0 0 0 0 0 0 <br />Redwood City Groundwater* 0 0 0 0 0 0 <br />TOTAL 12,798 13,018 13,722 14,166 14,575 14,987 <br />*Deflned as municipal potable source only. Does not include existing or future prIvate wells. <br />Source: Redwood City 2005 Urban Water ManaQement Plan. <br /> <br />5. THE STANFORD IN REDWOOD CITY PROJECT AND ITS PROJECTED WATER <br />DEMAND <br /> <br />Project Description <br />The "Stanford in Redwood City'! campus is proposed by Stanford University to occupy a 35- <br />acre portion of a larger 48-acre (former Mid-Point Technology Park) campus that is <br />intersected by Broadway and generally bounded by Highway 101, Douglas Avenue, Bay <br />Road and Second Avenue. The proposed project includes administrative offices, research <br />and development, and medical clinic space. Attachment 1 shows the conceptual site plan of <br />the Project. <br /> <br />Projected Water Demand <br />City staff and Project engineers used the City's Engineering Standards for Water System <br />Design Criteria (known as "Attachment a") to develop initial demand estimates for the <br />Stanford in Redwood City Project. These demand estimates were prepared by BKF <br />Engineers and provided to the City in a letter dated May 21, 2009 (see Attachment 2). <br /> <br />Does the 2005 UWMP account for the Stanford in Redwood City Project's demand? <br />The UWMP projects that by 2030 City-wide demand for water will be 13,719 af/yr. The <br />UWMP projects that 1,995 acre-feet of this demand will be met through the City's Recycled <br />Water Program, yielding a total demand of 11,724 af/yr for potable water. <br /> <br />This figure of 11 ,724 af/yr includes growth in City-wide demand for water between 2000 and <br />2030. The growth projections in the UWMP do not specifically identify any commercial <br />projects because they are based, in part, on employment projections. The UWMP does <br />however project future growth in the commercial sector and the Stanford in Redwood City <br />Project is considered to be in that sector. The UWMP estimates that an additional 487 af/yr <br />of potable water demand will come from indoor commercial water use between the years <br />2000-2030. The UWMP also estimates that an additional 233 af/yr of water demand will <br />come from outdoor commercial water use between the years 2000-2030. The UWMP <br />states that its growth projections for commercial irrigation demand do not differentiate <br />between irrigation with potable or recycled water. <br /> <br />The demand projections for the Stanford in Redwood City Project identified in Attachment 2, <br />Tables 3A, 3B, and 3C are within the growth projections contained in the City's 2005 <br />UWMP. <br /> <br />Page 7 of 11 <br />
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