Volume 14, Issue 6 pp. 1340-1356
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ANALYZING THE IMPACT OF LAND USE ON SEWER SERVICE AREA PLANNING1

Michael Shapiro

Michael Shapiro

Respectively, Assistant Professor, Department of City and Regional Planning, Gund Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, (617) 495–4870; and Gordon McKay Professor of Environmental Engineering and Professor, Department of City and Regional Planning, Harvard University. Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138.

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Peter Rogers

Peter Rogers

Respectively, Assistant Professor, Department of City and Regional Planning, Gund Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, (617) 495–4870; and Gordon McKay Professor of Environmental Engineering and Professor, Department of City and Regional Planning, Harvard University. Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138.

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First published: December 1978
Citations: 4
1

Paper No. 77157 of the Water Resources Bulletin. Discussions are open until August 1, 1979.

Abstract

ABSTRACT: The density and distribution of land uses has important consequences for the planning of sewerage systems and for the costs of these systems. This paper examines these consequences using a simplified service area model. The model determines the area to be served by a central waste treatment plant, where alternative on-lot disposal systems are also available. The model is applied to various urban area configurations, which are summarized by their total populations and by their population density distributions. Both minimum regional cost and minimum local cost service area configurations are determined. In addition, the sensitivity of the model to the parameters of the cost and population density functions is assessed. It is found that the model is most sensitive to the parameters of the collection cost function.

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