Cost: $134 million
Location: Grand Forks, North Dakota
Year: 2020-12-31
Size: 20 mgd
Owner: City of Grand Forks
Designers: AE2S
Contractor: Ulliman Schutte Construction
Construction Engineers
The Grand Forks Regional Water Treatment Plant (GRWTP), a new hybrid water treatment plan, was constructed by Ulliman Schutte for Grand Forks, North Dakota.
For Grand Forks, the water treatment plant represents a valuable investment in this North Dakota city’s future. With a budget of $134 million, the goal of the project was to provide the cityʼs residents and industries with potable water throughout the full range of influent water characteristics and usage demands. Additional key targets included reducing seasonal taste and odor issues, treating for sulfates from Devil’s Lake discharges, and meeting upcoming regulatory requirements related to phamaceuticals in water.
“One of the seminal events of Grand Forks was a flood in 1997,” said Todd Feland, Grand Forks city administrator. “It was a historic flood that inundated the city and out of that came a renewed master plan of what we should do with our drinking water system.”
Since the start of the project in December 2016, Grand Forks prioritized participation by local construction firms. Ulliman Schutte thus partnered with Construction Engineers in a joint venture to serve as construction manager at risk (CMAR). The CMAR team tracked the status of key project success criteria in a cloud-based project dashboard.
The 20 million gallons per day plant is basically two plants in one, with two parallel treatment trains utilizing different technologies: one based on reverse osmosis (RO) membrane filtration and the other based on conventional deep beds. In combination with ultrafiltration membranes and other physical and chemical treatment processes, the plant is well equipped to tackle the extreme swings in the quality of water it receives while optimizing the treatment stream.