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Co-Project Directors
Dr. Jeffrey Featherstone joined the
Ambler College of Temple University in September 2001 as the Director of the
Center for Sustainable Communities (CSC). He is the ex-Chair of the
Department of Community and Regional Planning (CRP). Dr. Featherstone is
the former Deputy Executive Director of the Delaware River Basin
Commission. E-mail
Dr. Robert Traver
is the Director of the Villanova Urban
Stormwater Partnership and a Professor in Villanova University’s
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Dr. Traver teaches
courses in surface water hydrology, open channel hydraulics, and urban
storm water management. His research interests include mathematical and
physical modeling of stream hydraulics, hydrology, and water
quality. His research has been funded by Growing Greener, the EPA 319
Nonpoint Source Program, the Chesapeake Research Consortium, Inc., EPA,
and Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. Dr. Traver was a member
of the American Society of Civil Engineers Hurricane Katrina External
Review Panel, and a member of the National Academies committee that
produced the recent report on Urban Stormwater Management in the United
States. He has testified before congress on green infrastructure, and is
board member of the LID Center. E-mail
Other Researchers
Mr. Derron LaBrake is a Consulting Ecologist and Certified
Professional Wetland Scientist, and Group Leader at Stantec, Inc. Over
his more than 20-year career he has worked on environmental projects
throughout the United States that have involved wetlands, including
using wetlands for water quality improvement and ecological risk
assessments. Mr. LaBrake successfully designed, permitted, and
constructed five stormwater demonstration projects with the CSC using a
Growing Greener Grant in 2006. He and his colleagues at Stantec also
performed the cost estimation for the stormwater improvements outlined
in the Fort Washington Flooding and Transportation Improvement Study.
Dr. Lynn Mandarano,
P.E., joined the faculty of the Department of Community and Regional
Planning as an Assistant Professor in 2005. Before earning her Ph.D. in
City and Regional Planning, she spent over ten years working as a
consultant for national and international environmental engineering
firms. She now specializes in collaborative planning and environmental
analysis and is an important member of the T-VSSI team.
Mr. Md Mahbubur Meenar
is the Assistant Director (GIS Operations and Research) of the Center
for Sustainable Communities and an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the
Department of Community and Regional Planning at Temple University
Ambler. Since 1999, Mr. Meenar has been actively involved in different
applications of GIS in planning. His research interests include
environmental modeling, 3-D GIS visualization, and GIS applications in
sustainable development and emergency management planning. Mr. Meenar
has been the principal investigator in several research projects funded
by state agency, local government, and non-profit organization.
Dr. Mary Myers is
Chair of the Temple University Landscape Architecture – Horticulture
department. She is also President of the Council of Educators in
Landscape Architecture, an international organization of university
professors. Prior to her university experience which began in 1996, she
was a landscape architect in private practice. Professional application
continues to guide her research which focuses on landscape
aesthetics/ecological restoration. Dr. Myers has engaged in several
stormwater related projects including: the redesign of a degraded stream
corridor (Rocky Branch Creek, Raleigh, NC) and an urban park designed to
improve riparian habitat and water quality (Pleasant Hill Park Master
Plan, Philadelphia, PA).
Mr. Richard Nalbandian,
P.G., AICP, joined the Center for Sustainable Communities in March 2002
as a Research Fellow and teaches environmental planning courses as a
Research Professor in the Department of Community and Regional Planning
of Temple University. He has more than 35 years of experience as
practitioner, manager, consultant, and teacher in earth and
environmental sciences and environmental planning. He was heavily
involved in the CSC’s recently completed Pennypack Creek Watershed Study
and the site selection and design of the demonstration BMPs at Pennypack
Ecological Restoration Trust.
Dr. David J. Robertson
is the Executive Director of the Pennypack
Ecological Restoration Trust in suburban Philadelphia, a position he has
held for 16 years. Under his direction, the Pennypack Trust has
developed expertise and leadership in the restoration of native forests
and natural land stewardship. Dr. Robertson earned his doctoral degree
at the University of Pittsburgh investigating the effects of forest
clearing on aquatic ecosystems in western Pennsylvania. He worked for
seven years restoring native ecosystems on land disturbed by phosphate
ore surface mining in central Florida. Since 1995, he has served as
president of the Northeast Chapter of the Society for Ecological
Restoration International.
Ms. Susan E. Spinella
is Assistant Director of the CSC. Susan
received an M.S. in Community and Regional Planning in January 2004. She
has been actively involved in emergency management planning and
mitigation analysis in Pennsylvania. Susan is an active member of the
Eastern Montgomery County Emergency Management Group and is also a
member of the International Association of Emergency Managers (IAEM).
Dr.
Laura Toran is the
Weeks Chair in Environmental Geology at Temple University. Dr. Toran’s expertise is
in the study of ground water quality and quantity. She has been a member
of the Temple University faculty since 1997, having worked 11 years at Oak
Ridge National Labs in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, prior to her appointment.
Dr. Bridget
Wadzuk
joined the faculty at Villanova University in 2005 as an Assistant
Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. She
has taught courses in fluid mechanics, hydrology and hydraulic
engineering and will be teaching graduate courses in open channel
hydraulics and environmental fluid mechanics. Her research specialty is
in the area of computational fluid dynamics, specifically examining
hydraulic modeling applications of stormwater best management practices,
such as constructed stormwater wetlands.
Dr. Andrea
Welker is an
Associate Professor in Villanova University’s Department of Civil and
Environmental Engineering. Since joining Villanova’s faculty in 1999,
she has taught courses in geology, soil mechanics, foundation design,
geosynthetics, and geo-environmental engineering. Recent research
projects include the study of 100 year old seepage pits and a
side-by-side comparison of pervious concrete and porous asphalt. She is
a licensed professional engineer in the state of Pennsylvania.
Research Assistants
James
Barbis graduated from Springfield College in 2002 with a B.S.
degree in Sports Biology and a minor in Chemistry. In the summer of
2007, James began his graduate studies at Villanova University in the
Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. His research is focused
on comparing the water quality of porous asphalt and pervious concrete,
along with the ability of underground storage and infiltration basins
decrease stormwater temperature ranges. After finishing his work at
Villanova he plans to continue to work with sustainable stormwater
control measures and watershed planning. James currently lives in
Wilmington, Delaware, and enjoys outdoor activities spending time with
friends and family.
Meghan
Feller graduated from Bucknell University in 2007 with a
Bachelors degree in Civil and Environmental Engineering. In the fall of
2007, she came to Villanova working under Dr. Robert Traver as a full
time graduate student and research assistant. Her personal research has
focused on quantification of the evapotranspiration portion of the water
budget from stormwater BMPs (primarily green roofs and bioinfiltration
sites). Upon completion of her thesis, she hopes to take a position
working towards sustainable stormwater management.
Ryan Lee is pursuing his Ph.D. in Water
Resources Engineering. His main focus of research is in developing a
usable, process-based model for ponded infiltration. He is using the
data available from Villanova's bioinfiltration traffic island to test
and develop the model.
Gerrad Jones has been a graduate
student in the Civil and Environmental Engineering department at
Villanova University since August 2007. He has a B.S. in Biology and an
M.S. in Fishery and Wildlife Sciences, but recently made the switch to
water resources and environmental engineering to find practical
solutions to environmental issues. His current research is on creating
an optimum hydraulic redesign for Villanova’s constructed stormwater
wetland using computer models. He has an interest in geospatial analyses
and has participated on GIS projects in Costa Rica and Peru. He intends
to pursue his Ph.D. at Villanova after completing his M.S. in Water
Resources and Environmental Engineering. |