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Brightwater is a 114-acre (46 ha) facility at the intersection of State Route 9 and State Route 522 north of Woodinville. [2] The plant itself occupies 114 acres (46 ha); the remainder of the property is used for stormwater treatment and environmental mitigation such as constructed wetlands and stormwater retention.
East of I-405, SR 522 enters Woodinville and follows Little Bear Creek as it turns north away from the city's downtown, intersecting SR 202. The freeway enters Snohomish County and intersects SR 9 south of the Brightwater sewage treatment plant. [12]
Another study identified an unusually broad band of scarps passing between Bothell and Snohomish, with several scarps in the vicinity of King County's controversial Brightwater regional sewage treatment plant showing at least four and possibly nine events on the SWIF in the last 16,400 years. [60]
Pages in category "Sewage treatment plants in Washington (state)" ... This list may not reflect recent changes. B. Brightwater Treatment Plant; E.
The company constructing the massive vitrification plant at the Hanford site in Eastern Washington has been awarded $9.5 million in incentive pay for its work last year on the plant’s High Level ...
The Brightwater sewage treatment plant built by King County across the county line in neighboring Snohomish County caused a number of issues, including a lawsuit between the counties over impact mitigation; cost overruns; and concerns over earthquake fault lines running through the site.
World’s 1st carbon-free fertilizer plant to be built in Richland, WA. Price tag is $1B. ... The Richland plant will be the first of its kind in the world and will support 1,000 local jobs. It is ...
In 1997, over 1,000 acres (4 km 2) of land were being sold on the south end of Bainbridge Island.Local residents Debbi and Paul Brainerd proposed the idea of building a children's outdoor education center; [4] a subsequent feasibility study showed that half of Puget Sound area students did not receive overnight outdoor education programs. [5]