John J. Carroll Water Treatment Plant Explained

John J. Carroll Water Treatment Plant
Status:In operation
Address:84 D’Angelo Drive
Location City:Marlborough, Massachusetts
Location Country:United States
Coordinates:42.3131°N -71.5844°W
Start Date:March 1999
Completion Date:March 2005
Opened Date:July 27, 2005
Cost:US$340 million
Owner:Massachusetts Water Resources Authority
Footnotes:[1] [2]

The John J. Carroll Water Treatment Plant (CWTP) is a water treatment plant operated since 2005 by the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) to treat water bound for Greater Boston. The plant is located at the town lines of Marlborough, Northborough, and Southborough, Massachusetts.

History

CWTP is named after John J. Carroll, an original member of the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) board of directors.[3] [2] It was constructed from 1999 to 2005, and opened in July 2005.[1] It replaced a prior facility only used for pH control. In addition to water treatment, CWTP has five concrete contact chambers capable of storing 11.3e6USgal. Its construction budget was US$340 million.

Operation

For water treatment, CWTP utilizes four ozone generators, designed to handle an average capacity of 275e6USgal per day—although average daily consumption is lower, at approximately 200e6USgal—and a peak level of 405e6USgal per day.[2] Ultraviolet light treatment was added in April 2014.[4] [2] A 500 kW photovoltaic array is used to harness solar energy, reducing operational cost.[2]

, water treatment performed at CWTP consists of:[2] [5]

Treatment Purpose
Cryptosporidium inactivation, Giardia inactivation
Ozone removal
Water disinfectant
Residual disinfection
Dental health
Residual disinfection
Increase alkalinity for pH buffering
Adjust pH level

Water for CWTP comes from the Wachusett Reservoir, primarily via the Cosgrove Tunnel, with the Wachusett Aqueduct as a standby backup. Treated water then flows towards Boston primarily via the MetroWest Water Supply Tunnel, with the Hultman Aqueduct as a secondary system.[6] The Sudbury Aqueduct and Weston Aqueduct serve as emergency backups.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The John J. Carroll Water Treatment Plant . mwra.com . Massachusetts Water Resources Authority . October 24, 2005 . https://web.archive.org/web/20051104221431/http://www.mwra.com/osu/whwtpfacts.htm . November 4, 2005 . . November 27, 2019 . live .
  2. News: The John J. Carroll Water Treatment Plant . mwra.com . Massachusetts Water Resources Authority . February 28, 2019 . November 26, 2019.
  3. News: MWRA to Honor Carroll . Robert . Carroll . . 38 . July 10, 2005 . November 27, 2019 . newspapers.com.
  4. News: MWRA uses ultraviolet treatment . Jacqueline . Tempera . . B4 . June 27, 2014 . November 27, 2019 . newspapers.com.
  5. News: New filtration method has MWRA bubbling with joy . Michael . Levenson . . A12 . August 20, 2005 . November 27, 2019 . newspapers.com.
  6. Web site: Map of MWRA's water system . mwra.com . November 27, 2019.