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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.
The South Treatment Plant is a wastewater treatment plant in Renton, Washington owned by King County. The plant opened in 1965, and treats over 90 million U.S. gallons (340 million liters) of wastewater per day. It treats sewage for 650,000 people in the cities of Renton, Auburn, Bellevue, Issaquah, Kent, and Sammamish. [1]
Pages in category "Sewage treatment plants in Washington (state)" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Waste Water Supervisor Dale Goebel shows the board the lights up green if the flow of the plant is working properly. With the updates this flow and more will be able to be checked through a computer.
The board approved funding a new overflow meter at the wastewater treatment plant. The town was also awarded $4 million to build a new plant by 2026.
Brightwater sewage treatment plant (Bothell) Everett Water Pollution Control Facility; Riverside Park Water Reclamation Facility (Spokane) South Treatment Plant (Renton) Spokane County Regional Water Reclamation Facility; Tacoma Central Wastewater Treatment Plant; West Point Treatment Plant (West Point (Seattle))
The city government maintains its own sanitary sewer and wastewater treatment services, including a treatment plant in downtown; [203] wastewater is also sent to the regional Brightwater plant near Maltby, which was originally planned to be built in Edmonds.
"The city has been pre-approved for a loan of approximately $2.1 million from the Georgia Environmental Authority to be used towards the wastewater treatment plant project," White said.