Salt Lake City to integrate water modeling, GIS

Dec. 14, 2010
EXTON, PA, Dec. 14, 2010 -- Salt Lake City, Utah, has selected and deployed Bentley's WaterGEMS V8i modeling and analysis software and HAMMER V8i transient analysis software to analyze, design, and operate its extensive water distribution system...

• Software's ability to interoperate with Esri's ArcGIS enables city's water and GIS professionals to maintain hydraulic model that's always up to date

EXTON, PA, Dec. 14, 2010 -- Bentley Systems, Incorporated, the leading company dedicated to providing comprehensive software solutions for the infrastructure that sustains our world, today announced that Salt Lake City, Utah, has selected and deployed Bentley's WaterGEMS V8i modeling and analysis software and HAMMER V8i transient analysis software to analyze, design, and operate its extensive water distribution system. The system serves approximately 450,000 residents and includes about 1,380 miles of pipes. Salt Lake City has a complete geographical information system (GIS) for its water, sewer, and stormwater infrastructure, for which each pipe in the various systems has been surveyed. The city's goal was to create a hydraulic model of its water distribution system using its existing GIS so that it could maintain a one-to-one relationship between the two. Bentley's WaterGEMS and HAMMER products enabled the city to easily accomplish this and also made the model building and updating processes easier and, thus, more efficient.

Brandon Arnold, GIS specialist at Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities, said, "Our first priority when selecting our water modeling software was to make sure the water model could be integrated with our GIS and maintained or updated easily. The city chose Bentley's WaterGEMS and HAMMER due to the software's ease of use and full interoperability with Esri's ArcGIS."

The new water model was built from scratch using WaterGEMS and the city's GIS. Once the pipe layout and connectivity were established, the software's LoadBuilder and TRex tools, which are common to both applications, were used, respectively, to allocate water demand and elevations to the hydraulic model's nodes. Pressure reducing valve (PRV) settings were imported from the GIS, and pump curves and controls were added.

Arnold continued, "WaterGEMS' Network Navigator and Pressure Zone Manager were extremely helpful in picking out the small system details and locating the few errors that existed. With 55 zones modeled, which include more than 38,000 pipes, the Salt Lake City water system can be a little overwhelming at times. The Pressure Zone Manager was great for zone-by-zone analysis, and it also made model building much more efficient. Tracking down a missing closed valve sometimes can be tricky. With the Pressure Zone Manager, it is easy to tell where the zones are connected. Once the zones have been established, the data that the WaterGEMS model calculates and displays, including the boundary nodes and total flow into and out of the zones, is very helpful. Overall, the model building process was relatively simple."

Now that the city has a working and up-to-date water model, its hydraulic analyses can include fire flow analysis, pipe sizing for new design projects, and some master planning. Many of the city's ongoing projects rely heavily on the use of the WaterGEMS model. Future projects will be particularly challenging since model assumptions evolve as population grows, the distribution system expands, and the pipe infrastructure ages. For these reasons, both the GIS and water model need to be kept up to date.

As Arnold explained, "Keeping the GIS and hydraulic model synchronized is one of the biggest challenges, as we certainly want to avoid having to rebuild the water model from scratch every time the GIS is updated. The GIS-ID feature in WaterGEMS will be a big help in maintaining that relationship between the model and our up-to-date GIS. It is particularly handy to be able to split a pipe or add a valve in the model without altering the relationship to the GIS. It makes updating the model a cleaner and easier process."

About the Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities
Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities is committed to serving its customers and protecting the environment by delivering high-quality drinking water, managing flood control and stormwater, and collecting and treating wastewater to standards that exceed EPA regulations. It actively protects the source waters and promotes their efficient use. Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities is involved in numerous planning processes and in actively implementing sustainability projects that range from reducing the greenhouse gas emissions and waste generation to ongoing efforts to protect the integrity of the watersheds and groundwater resources.

Established in 1847, the utility is the oldest retail water provider in the West, and as a municipal agency, it is funded by water sales and new connection fees, not taxes. For additional information about the Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities, visit http://www.slcgov.com/Utilities.

About WaterGEMS and HAMMER
From automated fire flow, water quality, criticality, and flushing studies to energy cost analysis and genetic algorithm optimization modules for automating pipe design, calibration, water loss detection, and pump scheduling optimization, WaterGEMS provides an easy-to-use environment for engineers to analyze, design, and operate water distribution systems. HAMMER helps engineers determine appropriate surge control strategies and reduce transients.

Users of WaterGEMS and HAMMER can work directly within four interoperable platforms -- including MicroStation, ArcGIS, AutoCAD, and a Windows stand-alone platform -- while accessing a single, shared project data source. This means modeling teams can leverage the skills of engineers from different departments, and engineers can flatten learning curves by choosing the environment they already know -- but provide results that can be visualized on multiple platforms.

For additional information about WaterGEMS, visit www.bentley.com/WaterGEMS. For additional information about HAMMER, visit www.bentley.com/HAMMER.

About Bentley Systems, Incorporated
Bentley is the global leader dedicated to providing architects, engineers, constructors, and owner-operators with comprehensive software solutions for sustaining infrastructure. Founded in 1984, Bentley has nearly 3,000 colleagues in more than 45 countries, $500 million in annual revenues, and, since 1999, has invested more than $1 billion in research, development, and acquisitions.

Additional information about Bentley is available at www.bentley.com and in Bentley's May 2010 Annual Report. For Bentley news as it happens, subscribe to an RSS feed of Bentley press releases and news alerts. To view a searchable collection of innovative infrastructure projects from the annual Be Inspired Awards, access Bentley's Year in Infrastructure publications. To access a professional networking site that enables members of the infrastructure community to connect, communicate, and learn from each other, visit Be Communities.

To download the Bentley Infrastructure 500 Top Owners ranking, a unique global compendium of the top public- and private-sector owners of infrastructure based on the value of their cumulative infrastructure investments, visit www.bentley.com/500.

Bentley, the "B" Bentley logo, Be, WaterGEMS, and HAMMER are either registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of Bentley Systems, Incorporated or one of its direct or indirect wholly owned subsidiaries. All other brands and product names are trademarks of their respective owners.

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