Impact of Homeowner Association (HOA) landscaping guidelines on residential water use

The association between increasing water intensive land‐cover, such as the use of turf grass and trees, and increasing water use is a growing concern for water‐stressed arid cities. Appropriate regulatory measures addressing residential landscaping, such as those applied by Homeowner Associations (H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water resources research 2016-05, Vol.52 (5), p.3373-3386
Hauptverfasser: Wentz, Elizabeth A., Rode, Sandra, Li, Xiaoxiao, Tellman, Elizabeth M., Turner, B. L.
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container_issue 5
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container_title Water resources research
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creator Wentz, Elizabeth A.
Rode, Sandra
Li, Xiaoxiao
Tellman, Elizabeth M.
Turner, B. L.
description The association between increasing water intensive land‐cover, such as the use of turf grass and trees, and increasing water use is a growing concern for water‐stressed arid cities. Appropriate regulatory measures addressing residential landscaping, such as those applied by Homeowner Associations (HOAs), may serve to reduce municipal water use, joining other water‐use reducing measures under consideration by arid cities. This research assesses quantitatively the role that Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CCRs) applied to landscaping by HOAs play on water consumption. Statistical comparisons and models of n=1973 parcels in Goodyear, Arizona, USA, reveal that: HOA yards have less vegetation cover and those households use less peak‐season water (July) than those households in non‐HOA neighborhoods. This hold true even though the HOA CCRs regulate only the minimum required front‐yard vegetation and most residents maintain more than the minimum vegetation level. Furthermore, front‐yard landscaping tends to be mimicked in the backyard such that total yard landscaping tracks best with total household water use. Results of the study suggest that HOA landscaping regulations have the potential to reduce peak‐season water use by up to 24% if CCRs were to set maximum vegetation regulations rather than minimum and if compliance were enforced. Lowering residential water consumption in this way potentially involves tradeoffs with the cooling effects of vegetation and its consequences on the urban heat island effect, on energy use, and on home values. Key Points: HOAs should emphasize maximum vegetation amounts HOAs should prescribe vegetation amounts for the total yard not just the front yard HOAs should limit the surface area of open water features particularly swimming pools
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Wiley Online Library AGU Free Content; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Aridity
climate change
conditions
Constrictions
Cooling
Cooling effects
covenants
Energy
Energy consumption
Grasses
Guidelines
Heat
Homeowners
Households
Land cover
Landscaping
Mathematical models
Municipal water
Neighborhoods
Plant cover
private governance
Regulations
residential water use
restrictions
Statistical analysis
Tradeoffs
Trees
Turf
Urban heat islands
Vegetation
Vegetation cover
Vegetation effects
Water
water conservation
Water consumption
Water use
title Impact of Homeowner Association (HOA) landscaping guidelines on residential water use
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