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PUBLIC OUTREACH AND EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS
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01:08
Storm Drains Connect to the Ocean: Be the Solution, Minimize Your Pollution.
Don’t let stormwater be the bad guy! When stormwater picks up pollutants from roofs, driveways, and roadways, it runs down the nearest storm drains and into water bodies unfiltered. This polluted water can lead to harmful bacteria and cyanobacteria blooms and can even shut down public access to lakes, ponds, and beaches. Installing green infrastructure is a start to addressing this issue, but did you know there are things you can do at home to help minimize this pollution before it runs into our recreational waterways?
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16:58
Storm Drain Mural Project 2021
Most conversations about stormwater management only include scientists, engineers, designers, and contractors, but urban water quality is an issue that affects us all. That’s why the Providence Stormwater Innovation Center reached out to local schools—to teach the next generation about the dangers of polluted water, the current solutions, and the reality that there’s much more to learn. By bringing real-world experiences into the curriculum, we hoped to leave a lasting impact on the students, empowering them to think beyond their classroom walls about the problems that need to be solved in their own communities. This year, we worked with three schools in Providence and Cranston: Eden Park Elementary, Sophia Academy, and the New Urban Arts Knights at Central High School. Educators from the Audubon Society of Rhode Island gave students an overview of water issues: Where does stormwater go? How does it become polluted? What is green infrastructure? And how can we all help reduce pollution? Sophia Academy and the NUA Knights also joined us in the park for green infrastructure tours and water quality sampling demonstrations. Then came the fun part—bringing these lessons to life through public art. Teaching artists Brett Windham, Katie Gui, and Eli Shalan learned about stormwater alongside the students. At Eden Park and Sophia Academy, each student then made a drawing that incorporated these lessons. The teaching artists synthesized the students' ideas into three mural designs to be painted on sidewalks beside storm drains. At Eden Park, students researched storm drain locations in their neighborhoods and asked homeowners for permission to paint a mural outside. This proved to be a great way for students to bring their learning home and educate their neighbors! At Sophia Academy and Central High School, the teaching artists and students painted the murals on school grounds. The diversity and creativity of ideas represented in this video speak to the success of this program. We are confident that these students will continue to advocate for the environment in their communities, and that they’ll do so with the kind of innovative thinking that scientists, educators, and artists will need to make a difference in an increasingly urbanized world. We look forward to continuing our relationships with these schools and to extending our educational outreach to new schools this fall.
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03:15
The Rain Harvest Arts Festival
The Rain Harvest Arts Festival is a celebration of art, water and community at the Providence Stormwater Innovation Center in Roger Williams Park
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Play Video
01:48
Stormwater Basic Training
This introductory video is part of our Stormwater 101 training series. Please check out our official training listings on our website, https://www.stormwaterinnovation.org/, for more information!
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Play Video
00:33
Providence Stormwater Innovation Center
The Providence Stormwater Innovation Center is a place-based training and education center in Roger Williams park that shares knowledge and information regarding green stormwater infrastructure, stormwater, and the associated water quality issues.
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