Location Name - Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant
5000 Overlook Avenue Southwest
Washington, District of Columbia 20032 US

Location ID: 10079973


Description:
The DC Office of Motion Picture and Television Development is pleased to recognize the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant in Southwest Washington as the December 2014 One City Location of the Month. The plant, which sits at the southernmost tip of the District, covers more than 150 acres along the Potomac River and treats an average of 300 million gallons of wastewater per day for 640,000 District residents and nearly 2 million people in neighboring jurisdictions in Maryland and Virginia. This facility offers a captivating backdrop for all types of multimedia projects looking to capture the District’s many untapped wonders. Blue Plains first opened for limited operations in July 1937 as the Blue Plains Sewage Disposal Plant, ushering in a new era in sanitation. Previously, open sewers ran through the city and discharged to the waterways without treatment, carrying with them the potential for infectious outbreaks. The federal government commissioned the construction of Blue Plains, under the Public Works Administration as part of FDR’s New Deal. The treatment facility, which serves as the largest advanced wastewater treatment plant in the world, began with just 12 primary clarification tanks and acres of unused land. Today, primary, secondary, tertiary and filtration wastewater treatment processes take up most of the 153-acre site, and more are being built. The facility is held to some of the strictest discharge permit levels in the world, requiring cutting-edge scientific research to achieve. In addition to the acres and acres of open treatment tanks, there are several massive projects underway or recently completed at Blue Plains that are awe inspiring. This $4 billion in capital investment includes the Clean Rivers Project, which is tunneling 100 feet below the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers, and is accessed through giant shafts on the Blue Plains plant. Rising in the other direction, 70 feet above the plant, are 4 large digesters, part of a new Biosolids Management Program that is the largest of its kind in the world. Unprecedented filming locations include a deep hundred foot shaft with yellow waterproofing covering the walls and the new Blue Plains Tunnel, which ultimately will stretch 4.5 miles from Blue Plains to near Nationals Park. The tunnel is currently 60 percent completed. Blue Plains also has its own dock and stunning river views of downtown Washington, Old Town Alexandria and the Woodrow Wilson Bridge.



photos:

photo ID#: 4648877 - Antony-22 - Own work Blue Plains Wastewater Plant viewed from the Potomac water taxi in 2019 • CC BY-SA 4.0 • File:Blue Plains Wastewater Plant 2019.jpg • Created: 11 June 2019 • Location: 38° 48′ 45.74″ N, 77° 2′ 3.46″ W Blue Plains Wastewater Plant 2019 - Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant - Wikipedia


photo ID#: 4648878 - U.S. EPA - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Philadelphia, PA (2013-06-13). "Wastewater Innovation Saving Energy, Saving Money." Healthy Waters for EPA's Mid-Atlantic Region. An official blog of ths U.S. EPA. View of sludge thermal hydrolysis reactors, utilizing the Cambi process, being installed at the Blue Plains Wastewater Treatment Plant, Washington, D.C. • Public Domain • File:Blue Plains-thermal hydrolysis plant 2013.png • Created: 1 January 2013 Blue Plains-thermal hydrolysis plant 2013 - Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant - Wikipedia


photo ID#: 4648880 - U.S. EPA - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Washington, D.C. "Blue Plains Wastewater Facility in Washington DC Reinforces Facility Against Floods." Climate Change Adaptation Resource Center. Aerial view of Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant, Washington, D.C. Route 295 is seen along the right side of the facility. • Public Domain • File:Blue Plains WWTP - aerial 2016.jpg • Created: circa 2016 date QS:P,+2016-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902 Blue Plains WWTP - aerial 2016 - Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant - Wikipedia