Master Drainage Plan Update (2026)

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Arkansas River looking upstream, clouds rolling in from the east.

Project Overview

The Town of Buena Vista is updating its Master Drainage Plan to guide how stormwater is managed across the community now and into the future. This plan provides a long-term engineering strategy to analyze local topography, land use, and hydrology in order to reduce flooding risk, protect public infrastructure, and support safe development.

The updated plan will replace the Town’s existing 2014 Drainage Plan and Drainage Study and serve as the primary reference for drainage planning and stormwater improvements moving forward.


Project Purpose

This update will:

  • Evaluate existing drainage features and stormwater infrastructure

  • Identify areas vulnerable to flooding

  • Assess current and future drainage needs

  • Prioritize improvements to support community growth and safety

The plan provides a data-driven framework for managing stormwater while protecting roads, homes, and public facilities.


Study Area

The Master Drainage Plan Update covers the entire Town of Buena Vista, ensuring that drainage systems are evaluated comprehensively and consistently across all neighborhoods and development areas.


What’s Being Studied

The project includes analysis of:

  • Land use and surface characteristics

  • Stormwater flow rates

  • Existing drainage channels and detention basins

  • Storage and detention requirements for future development

  • Opportunities for regional stormwater facilities

This technical evaluation supports practical recommendations for capital improvements and development standards.


Project Consultant

Engineering analysis and plan preparation are being conducted by:

RG and Associates, LLC
on behalf of the Town of Buena Vista.


Project Status

Current Phase: Master Drainage Plan Update (Draft/Final under review)

Once adopted, this plan will:

  • Supersede the 2014 Drainage Plan & Drainage Study

  • Inform future capital improvement planning

  • Guide drainage requirements for new development


Connection to the 2025 Comprehensive Town Plan:

WE Big Idea 3: Protect water resources and plan for long-term resilience
WE Action 3A: Integrate water and land use planning
WE Action 3C: Reduce flood risk and improve stormwater systems

The Master Drainage Plan Update advances these goals by providing a town-wide hydrologic and hydraulic analysis to manage stormwater, reduce localized flooding, and protect public and private infrastructure. By identifying basin-specific storage needs and prioritizing improvements, the plan supports responsible growth and long-term water system resilience.

TCS Big Idea 7: Improve utility resiliency and sustainability planning
TCS Action 7A: Hazard mitigation for utilities
TCS Action 6A: Utility growth alignment

This update supports utility resilience by evaluating existing drainage infrastructure, establishing design criteria for future facilities, and aligning stormwater capacity with development patterns. The plan provides the technical foundation for capital planning that protects streets, utilities, and transportation corridors from storm-related damage.

LUCC Big Idea 1: Implement the Future Land Use Map and associated land use vision
LUCC Action 1D: Coordinate long-range planning, zoning updates, and capital improvements
LUCC Action 1C: Prioritize infill and redevelopment in existing service areas

By linking drainage capacity to land use patterns, the Master Drainage Plan ensures growth occurs where infrastructure can safely function. It supports orderly development and helps mitigate flood risk in vulnerable basins identified across the community.


Building on Adopted Plans

The Master Drainage Plan Update provides the technical framework needed to implement stormwater and resilience goals across multiple adopted Town plans:

  • Water Resources Master Plan (2021)
    Calls for integrated water system planning and protection of water infrastructure. The drainage update complements this plan by addressing stormwater as a core component of the Town’s overall water management strategy.


  • Source Water Protection Plan (2016)
    Drainage and stormwater improvements help reduce erosion, sediment transport, and contamination risk pathways tied to runoff and storm events.

  • Water Resources Master Plan (2021)
    Emphasizes responsible management of water systems and protection of water quality. Drainage improvements reduce system stress during storm events and support controlled runoff and detention practices.


  • Hwy 24 Access Control Plan (2014)
    Helps align corridor decisions with stormwater conveyance needs and risk areas along key access routes.

  • Parking Analysis (2015)
    Downtown and event-area drainage considerations often intersect with surface design, runoff capture, and operational impacts during peak use.

  • Transportation Master Plan (2004)
    Identifies roadway safety and infrastructure reliability as priorities. Drainage findings inform roadway design and capital projects by addressing runoff, culvert capacity, and flood-prone corridors.


  • Recreation & Trails Master Plan (2016)
    Promotes protection of natural resources and trail infrastructure. Drainage planning supports safe trail crossings, protects open space from erosion, and improves stormwater management near recreational assets.


  • Three-Mile Plan (2025)
    Guides coordinated growth at the Town’s edges. Drainage basin analysis helps ensure annexation and fringe development areas are planned with adequate stormwater infrastructure.

Why This Matters

A modern drainage plan helps Buena Vista:

  • Reduce flood risk

  • Protect property and infrastructure

  • Improve stormwater management

  • Plan responsibly for growth

  • Increase resilience to extreme weather events

This update ensures that drainage decisions are based on current data, modern standards, and long-term community needs.


Project Overview

The Town of Buena Vista is updating its Master Drainage Plan to guide how stormwater is managed across the community now and into the future. This plan provides a long-term engineering strategy to analyze local topography, land use, and hydrology in order to reduce flooding risk, protect public infrastructure, and support safe development.

The updated plan will replace the Town’s existing 2014 Drainage Plan and Drainage Study and serve as the primary reference for drainage planning and stormwater improvements moving forward.


Project Purpose

This update will:

  • Evaluate existing drainage features and stormwater infrastructure

  • Identify areas vulnerable to flooding

  • Assess current and future drainage needs

  • Prioritize improvements to support community growth and safety

The plan provides a data-driven framework for managing stormwater while protecting roads, homes, and public facilities.


Study Area

The Master Drainage Plan Update covers the entire Town of Buena Vista, ensuring that drainage systems are evaluated comprehensively and consistently across all neighborhoods and development areas.


What’s Being Studied

The project includes analysis of:

  • Land use and surface characteristics

  • Stormwater flow rates

  • Existing drainage channels and detention basins

  • Storage and detention requirements for future development

  • Opportunities for regional stormwater facilities

This technical evaluation supports practical recommendations for capital improvements and development standards.


Project Consultant

Engineering analysis and plan preparation are being conducted by:

RG and Associates, LLC
on behalf of the Town of Buena Vista.


Project Status

Current Phase: Master Drainage Plan Update (Draft/Final under review)

Once adopted, this plan will:

  • Supersede the 2014 Drainage Plan & Drainage Study

  • Inform future capital improvement planning

  • Guide drainage requirements for new development


Connection to the 2025 Comprehensive Town Plan:

WE Big Idea 3: Protect water resources and plan for long-term resilience
WE Action 3A: Integrate water and land use planning
WE Action 3C: Reduce flood risk and improve stormwater systems

The Master Drainage Plan Update advances these goals by providing a town-wide hydrologic and hydraulic analysis to manage stormwater, reduce localized flooding, and protect public and private infrastructure. By identifying basin-specific storage needs and prioritizing improvements, the plan supports responsible growth and long-term water system resilience.

TCS Big Idea 7: Improve utility resiliency and sustainability planning
TCS Action 7A: Hazard mitigation for utilities
TCS Action 6A: Utility growth alignment

This update supports utility resilience by evaluating existing drainage infrastructure, establishing design criteria for future facilities, and aligning stormwater capacity with development patterns. The plan provides the technical foundation for capital planning that protects streets, utilities, and transportation corridors from storm-related damage.

LUCC Big Idea 1: Implement the Future Land Use Map and associated land use vision
LUCC Action 1D: Coordinate long-range planning, zoning updates, and capital improvements
LUCC Action 1C: Prioritize infill and redevelopment in existing service areas

By linking drainage capacity to land use patterns, the Master Drainage Plan ensures growth occurs where infrastructure can safely function. It supports orderly development and helps mitigate flood risk in vulnerable basins identified across the community.


Building on Adopted Plans

The Master Drainage Plan Update provides the technical framework needed to implement stormwater and resilience goals across multiple adopted Town plans:

  • Water Resources Master Plan (2021)
    Calls for integrated water system planning and protection of water infrastructure. The drainage update complements this plan by addressing stormwater as a core component of the Town’s overall water management strategy.


  • Source Water Protection Plan (2016)
    Drainage and stormwater improvements help reduce erosion, sediment transport, and contamination risk pathways tied to runoff and storm events.

  • Water Resources Master Plan (2021)
    Emphasizes responsible management of water systems and protection of water quality. Drainage improvements reduce system stress during storm events and support controlled runoff and detention practices.


  • Hwy 24 Access Control Plan (2014)
    Helps align corridor decisions with stormwater conveyance needs and risk areas along key access routes.

  • Parking Analysis (2015)
    Downtown and event-area drainage considerations often intersect with surface design, runoff capture, and operational impacts during peak use.

  • Transportation Master Plan (2004)
    Identifies roadway safety and infrastructure reliability as priorities. Drainage findings inform roadway design and capital projects by addressing runoff, culvert capacity, and flood-prone corridors.


  • Recreation & Trails Master Plan (2016)
    Promotes protection of natural resources and trail infrastructure. Drainage planning supports safe trail crossings, protects open space from erosion, and improves stormwater management near recreational assets.


  • Three-Mile Plan (2025)
    Guides coordinated growth at the Town’s edges. Drainage basin analysis helps ensure annexation and fringe development areas are planned with adequate stormwater infrastructure.

Why This Matters

A modern drainage plan helps Buena Vista:

  • Reduce flood risk

  • Protect property and infrastructure

  • Improve stormwater management

  • Plan responsibly for growth

  • Increase resilience to extreme weather events

This update ensures that drainage decisions are based on current data, modern standards, and long-term community needs.


Share your Stormwater Story!

We’re updating Buena Vista’s Master Drainage Plan to better manage stormwater, reduce flooding, and protect roads, homes, and public spaces.

We want to hear from you.

Have you ever experienced:

  • Flooding in your yard, driveway, or street?

  • Ponding water after heavy rain or snowmelt?

  • Erosion, ice buildup, or drainage problems near your home or business?

  • Trouble walking, biking, or driving because of runoff or standing water?

Tell us your story:

Use the space below to share:

  • Where the issue happened (street or neighborhood)

  • What you experienced

  • When it tends to occur (rain, snowmelt, certain seasons)

  • How it affects you or your property

Photos are welcome if you have them.

Your input will help the Town:

  • Identify problem areas

  • Prioritize drainage improvements

  • Make sure future projects focus on real community needs

Thank you for helping shape a safer, more resilient Buena Vista.

Thank you for sharing your story with us.

All fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required.

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  • Share Intersection at Cedar Street and Colorado on Facebook Share Intersection at Cedar Street and Colorado on Twitter Share Intersection at Cedar Street and Colorado on Linkedin Email Intersection at Cedar Street and Colorado link

    Intersection at Cedar Street and Colorado

    by Becky Cassel, about 1 month ago

    The south side of Colorado at Cedar Street pools with water. This becomes a problem in the winter with freeze/thaw cycles that result in a slush pond or ice field that quickly spans the width of Colorado. Since there are no sidewalks in this area, residents who are walking are often forced to traverse this slush pond that can be several inches deep or skate their way across if the pond has turned to ice.

    Thanks for considering this location for improvements!

    Also, I'd like to suggest coordinating with organizations that can offer funding/incentives to land stewards in our watershed... Continue reading

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  • Share Intersection at E. Main and Beldan St. on Facebook Share Intersection at E. Main and Beldan St. on Twitter Share Intersection at E. Main and Beldan St. on Linkedin Email Intersection at E. Main and Beldan St. link

    Intersection at E. Main and Beldan St.

    by Kristen, about 1 month ago

    The intersection of E. Main and Beldan St. ( across from elementary school) gets severe flooding over the sidewalk areas and crosswalk during rain storms. The flow of water from downtown E. Main shops to this intersection is big. Hopefully more drainage can go in before this intersection.

    Thanks for taking feedback!


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  • Share Alley between S. Gunnison Ave. and S. San Juan Ave. on Facebook Share Alley between S. Gunnison Ave. and S. San Juan Ave. on Twitter Share Alley between S. Gunnison Ave. and S. San Juan Ave. on Linkedin Email Alley between S. Gunnison Ave. and S. San Juan Ave. link

    Alley between S. Gunnison Ave. and S. San Juan Ave.

    by Local Retiree, about 2 months ago
    There is a lateral ditch that crosses the alley, running from a yard in the 300 block of S. San Juan to our yard and then up to the corner of S. Gunnison and Mill St. The ditch is channelled across the alley via a small culvert. When leaves, tree debris, rocks, etc. block the culvert, the water backs up into the yard facing S. San Juan and eventually floods the alley. The alley surface is very low where the culvert crosses, so even when the culvert is open (and in fact dry), a significant amount of water ponds just... Continue reading
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  • Share East Main Street Alley - Southside on Facebook Share East Main Street Alley - Southside on Twitter Share East Main Street Alley - Southside on Linkedin Email East Main Street Alley - Southside link

    East Main Street Alley - Southside

    by Amy, 2 months ago
    The East Main alley to the South is a bit challenging at times. The standing water, potholes, combined with delivery trucks take a toll. The town does its best to grade it.
  • Share Photo of ponding on Barnwood Drive on Facebook Share Photo of ponding on Barnwood Drive on Twitter Share Photo of ponding on Barnwood Drive on Linkedin Email Photo of ponding on Barnwood Drive link

    Photo of ponding on Barnwood Drive

    by Dave, 2 months ago
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  • Share Ponding on Barnwood @ HoR Med. Ctr. on Facebook Share Ponding on Barnwood @ HoR Med. Ctr. on Twitter Share Ponding on Barnwood @ HoR Med. Ctr. on Linkedin Email Ponding on Barnwood @ HoR Med. Ctr. link

    Ponding on Barnwood @ HoR Med. Ctr.

    by Dave, 2 months ago

    It doesn’t take much moisture to cause significant ponding in a swale on Barnwood Drive, located between the medical center parking lot and the Deerhammer Distillery building, just east of the Police Station. Because there is no infrastructure on the Deerhammer property to receive and move stormwater draining from the medical center parking lot, that water quickly accumulates in the street with no place to go, making the sidewalk impassable and the street hazardous to drive. In effect, this portion of Barnwood Drive becomes a small detention pond.

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  • Share S Gunnison on Facebook Share S Gunnison on Twitter Share S Gunnison on Linkedin Email S Gunnison link

    S Gunnison

    by Anne, 2 months ago

    When it rains or snows and melts, there is an issue with water gathering in front of 807 S Gunnison. This has been an issue since we purchased the property in 1988. After my husband fell on the ice in 1990, while holding our infant daughter, we complained to the city, and the city raised the sidewalk in front of the house. This helped alleviate a lot of water/ice backup onto the sidewalk, however where we park our vehicles has continued to be a problem, and the standing water splashes onto the sidewalk causing a hazard, not only for us... Continue reading

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  • Share Park Lane Neighborhood on Facebook Share Park Lane Neighborhood on Twitter Share Park Lane Neighborhood on Linkedin Email Park Lane Neighborhood link

    Park Lane Neighborhood

    by Neighbor, 2 months ago

    The drain at the end of Park Lane and De Paul Avenue does not drain properly. In years prior large pooling happens during storms and significant snow melt.

  • Share Park Lane on Facebook Share Park Lane on Twitter Share Park Lane on Linkedin Email Park Lane link

    Park Lane

    by NB, 2 months ago
    The Storm drain on the south side of park lane frequently overflows and drains very slowly.
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    ambergaston@gmail.com

    by agaston, 2 months ago
    This is a non story as I think the town does a great job at this and have never seen or been a part of an issue. I am a real estate agent in town and I hear lots of stories about many things and I have not heard a story of this being an issue nor have I experienced this as a citizen. I think it is just as important to hear that it does not seem to be a perceived town wide problem as it is to hear problem stories. I appreciate your due diligence and work to... Continue reading
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Page last updated: 23 Feb 2026, 04:50 PM