Hydrological Analysis – Preliminary Report: Wharton County, TX

Hydrological Analysis Report

Generated: 2025-09-08T14:02:55.719608
File: texas_wharton_20250908_140254.kml

Executive Summary

Location: Unknown, Wharton County, Texas
Flood Zone: AE - High Risk - Special Flood Hazard Area (1% annual chance)
Site Area: 100.0 acres (0.16 sq mi)

Site Location

Site Information

Geographic Data

  • Center Coordinates: 29.298462, -96.107424
  • Bounding Box:
  • North: 29.301327
  • South: 29.295598
  • East: -96.104139
  • West: -96.110708
  • Dimensions: 0.4 mi × 0.4 mi

Flood Zone Analysis

Primary Flood Zone: AE

Risk Level: High Risk - Special Flood Hazard Area (1% annual chance)
DFIRM Panel: 48481C

Flood Zone Implications

  • ⚠️ HIGH RISK: Property is in Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA)
  • Flood insurance is MANDATORY for federally-backed mortgages
  • Floodplain development permit required for any construction

Precipitation Data

Using ACTUAL NOAA Atlas 14 precipitation data

The precipitation values shown below were retrieved directly from NOAA's
Precipitation Frequency Data Server (PFDS) for your specific location.

Verify data at: https://hdsc.nws.noaa.gov/hdsc/pfds/pfds_map_cont.html?lat=29.2985&lon=-96.1074

Location: 29.2984625°, -96.10742350000001°
Region: Southeast US
Data Source: NOAA Atlas 14 - Actual Data

Design Storm Summary

  • Water Quality Volume (WQv) - 1-year, 24-hour storm
  • Depth: 3.73 inches
  • Use: BMP sizing for water quality treatment
  • Channel Protection Volume (CPv) - 2-year, 24-hour storm
  • Depth: 4.86 inches
  • Use: Extended detention for channel erosion prevention
  • Overbank Flood Protection - 10-year, 24-hour storm
  • Depth: 8.02 inches
  • Use: Detention sizing for flood mitigation
  • Extreme Flood Protection - 100-year, 24-hour storm
  • Depth: 14.7 inches
  • Use: Emergency spillway and freeboard design

Precipitation Frequency Estimates

Return Period5-min10-min15-min30-min60-min2-hr3-hr6-hr12-hr24-hr2-day3-day7-day10-day
1-yr0.501 in0.795 in1.01 in1.43 in1.89 in2.32 in2.56 in2.97 in3.34 in3.73 in4.15 in4.49 in5.6 in6.25 in
2-yr0.578 in0.919 in1.16 in1.64 in2.18 in2.75 in3.1 in3.7 in4.27 in4.86 in5.52 in5.97 in7.16 in7.85 in
5-yr0.706 in1.12 in1.41 in1.99 in2.66 in3.44 in3.94 in4.79 in5.61 in6.48 in7.44 in8.08 in9.51 in10.3 in
10-yr0.81 in1.29 in1.62 in2.28 in3.05 in4.02 in4.67 in5.79 in6.87 in8.02 in9.3 in10.1 in11.6 in12.5 in
25-yr0.953 in1.52 in1.9 in2.66 in3.59 in4.85 in5.72 in7.25 in8.76 in10.3 in12.1 in13.1 in14.8 in15.7 in
50-yr1.06 in1.7 in2.11 in2.94 in3.99 in5.49 in6.56 in8.47 in10.4 in12.4 in14.7 in15.9 in17.5 in18.3 in
100-yr1.17 in1.87 in2.32 in3.23 in4.4 in6.18 in7.49 in9.82 in12.2 in14.7 in17.5 in18.8 in20.3 in21.1 in

For complete precipitation data including all durations, visit the NOAA PFDS

Rainfall Intensity (for Rational Method)

  • 10 yr, 5 min: 9.72 inches/hr
  • 25 yr, 5 min: 11.44 inches/hr
  • 100 yr, 5 min: 14.04 inches/hr

Precipitation Visualizations

Intensity-Duration-Frequency (IDF) Curves

Precipitation Summary

100-Year Design Storm Hyetograph

Regulatory Analysis

Jurisdictional Overview

  • Federal: FEMA, USACE (if wetlands present)
  • State: Texas
  • County: Wharton
  • City: Unincorporated area

Permit Requirements

Research conducted: 2025-09-08T14:02:56.310656

Based on the jurisdiction analysis for Wharton County, Texas, here are the EXACT requirements for your 100.0-acre site in Zone AE:

1. STATE-LEVEL PERMIT REQUIREMENTS

Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ)

  • Agency: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
  • Construction General Permit: TPDES Construction General Permit (TXR150000) - REQUIRED for 100-acre site
  • Threshold: 1 acre or more of disturbance (your site exceeds this)
  • Notice of Intent (NOI) must be filed electronically via STEERS system
  • Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWP3) required on-site
  • State Stormwater Management: Incorporated into Construction General Permit
  • Erosion Control: Part of TXR150000 requirements
  • Wetland Permits: No state wetland program; federal Section 404 applies
  • Professional Requirements:
  • PE required for certain hydraulic calculations
  • No state RLD certification program
  • State Fees: $325 for Construction General Permit NOI
  • Timeline: 7-day waiting period after NOI submission
  • Applications: Submit via STEERS at www2.tceq.texas.gov/steers/

IMPORTANT: I cannot provide verified current phone numbers or email addresses. Please search "TCEQ Region 12 Houston" for the regional office serving Wharton County.

2. LOCAL PERMIT REQUIREMENTS

Wharton County Requirements

  • Floodplain Development Permit - REQUIRED for Zone AE
  • Form: Contact Wharton County Engineer's Office for current application
  • Submittal: Typically 3 paper copies + 1 digital
  • Scale: 1"=100' or larger for site plans
  • Fees: Contact County Engineer for current fee schedule
  • Review Timeline: Typically 2-4 weeks

VERIFICATION NEEDED: Contact Wharton County Engineer's Office directly for:

  • Current permit application forms
  • 2024/2025 fee schedule
  • Exact submittal requirements

3. PERMIT SEQUENCING AND COORDINATION

  1. First: Obtain Wharton County Floodplain Development Permit
  2. Second: File TCEQ TPDES NOI (at least 7 days before construction)
  3. No combined application - separate submissions required
  4. Total Timeline: 3-5 weeks minimum for complete permit package

4. TECHNICAL CALCULATIONS

State Requirements (TCEQ):

  • Methodology: No specific state methodology mandated
  • Software: No specific software required by state
  • Storm Events:
  • 2-year for temporary erosion controls
  • 25-year for permanent BMPs

Local Requirements (Wharton County):

  • Methodology: Unit hydrograph method REQUIRED for 100-acre site (exceeds 200-acre threshold for Rational Method)
  • Software: HEC-RAS commonly accepted for floodplain analysis
  • Storm Events:
  • 100-year storm for detention design (Zone AE requirement)
  • Pre-development vs post-development comparison required

Precipitation Data:

CRITICAL VERIFICATION NEEDED:

  • NOAA Atlas 14 values provided (100-year, 24-hour: 14.7 inches) should be verified with County Engineer
  • Ask specifically: "Does Wharton County accept NOAA Atlas 14 values or require local IDF curves?"
  • Storm distribution: Verify if Type II or Type III required

5. DESIGN STANDARDS

State BMP Standards:

  • Reference: TCEQ RG-348 (technical guidance)
  • No mandatory state BMP manual

Local Standards for 100-Acre Site in Zone AE:

  • CRITICAL FREEBOARD REQUIREMENT:
  • Wharton County: 1 foot above Base Flood Elevation (per Flood Damage Prevention Order)
  • This meets FEMA minimum for Zone AE
  • VERIFICATION NEEDED: Confirm current freeboard requirement with County Engineer
  • Detention: 100-year post-development release rate ≤ pre-development rate
  • Foundation Requirements: Elevation Certificate required for structures in Zone AE
  • Fill Requirements: Compensatory storage may be required in Zone AE

6. SUBMITTAL DETAILS

State (TCEQ):

  • Electronic submittal via STEERS
  • PE certification required for certain elements
  • SWP3 kept on-site, not submitted

Local (Wharton County):

  • Plan sheets typically include:
  1. Cover sheet with project data
  2. Existing conditions/topography
  3. Proposed grading plan
  4. Drainage area map
  5. Hydraulic calculations
  6. Erosion control plan
  7. Details and specifications
  • PE seal required on drainage plans
  • Digital format: PDF typical, verify current requirements

7. STATE AGENCY CONTACTS

SUGGESTED SEARCH TERMS (I cannot provide verified current contact info):

  • "TCEQ Region 12 Houston office"
  • "TCEQ stormwater permits contact"
  • "Texas floodplain management program"

8. LOCAL CONTACTS AND RESOURCES

SUGGESTED SEARCH TERMS:

  • "Wharton County Engineer's Office"
  • "Wharton County floodplain administrator"
  • "Wharton County development permits"

CRITICAL ACTIONS FOR YOUR 100-ACRE ZONE AE SITE:

  1. Contact Wharton County Engineer immediately to verify:
  • Current freeboard requirement for Zone AE
  • Acceptance of NOAA Atlas 14 precipitation data
  • Specific application forms and fees
  • Compensatory storage requirements for fill in Zone AE
  1. Prepare for TCEQ TPDES permit:
  • Register for STEERS account
  • Prepare SWP3 document
  • Budget $325 for state permit fee
  1. Design considerations specific to your site:
  • Use unit hydrograph method (required for 100 acres)
  • Design for 100-year storm event
  • Ensure 1-foot freeboard minimum above BFE
  • Plan for potential compensatory storage if placing fill

Additional Jurisdictional Information

Based on my research of hydrological permitting requirements for Wharton County, Texas:

1. STATE-LEVEL REGULATORY AGENCIES

  • Primary state environmental agency: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ)
  • Stormwater management: TCEQ Water Quality Division handles the Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (TPDES)
  • State-level permits required:
  • TPDES Construction General Permit (TXR150000) for construction activities
  • TPDES Multi-Sector General Permit for industrial facilities
  • TPDES Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) permits
  • Erosion and sediment control: Incorporated into TPDES Construction General Permit requirements
  • State wetland program: No state-specific wetland protection program; relies on federal Section 404 permits
  • Water quality standards: Texas Surface Water Quality Standards (30 TAC Chapter 307)

2. STATE REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS

  • Construction stormwater permits: Yes, TPDES Construction General Permit required
  • Disturbed area threshold: 1 acre or more (same as federal)
  • BMP standards: Technical guidance in TCEQ's "Complying with the Edwards Aquifer Rules" (RG-348) serves as statewide reference
  • Freeboard requirements: No state-mandated freeboard beyond local requirements
  • Post-construction requirements: Required through TPDES permits for MS4 communities
  • Professional certifications: No state-specific Responsible Land Disturber certification; Professional Engineer (PE) required for certain submissions

3. COUNTY/LOCAL REGULATORY STRUCTURE

  • Wharton County:
  • Wharton County Engineer's Office handles floodplain development permits
  • No separate stormwater management district
  • City of Wharton (if applicable):
  • Public Works Department handles drainage issues
  • May have separate requirements from county
  • Key ordinances:
  • Wharton County Flood Damage Prevention Order
  • Local subdivision regulations

4. UNIQUE LOCAL REQUIREMENTS

  • Freeboard: Wharton County typically requires 1 foot of freeboard above Base Flood Elevation
  • Calculation methods: Rational Method for areas under 200 acres; unit hydrograph methods for larger areas
  • Software: No specific software mandated, but HEC-RAS commonly accepted for floodplain analysis
  • Design standards: County may reference TxDOT Hydraulic Design Manual for roadway drainage

5. STATE-LOCAL INTERACTION

  • Permit sequence:
  1. Local floodplain development permit typically obtained first
  2. TPDES Notice of Intent (NOI) filed before construction begins
  • Joint applications: No joint application process; separate submissions required
  • Local vs. state: Local requirements often exceed state minimums for drainage design

6. TECHNICAL STANDARDS

State Requirements:

  • 2-year storm for temporary erosion controls
  • 25-year storm for permanent BMPs

Local Requirements:

  • 10-year storm for residential streets
  • 25-year storm for collector streets
  • 100-year storm for detention design
  • Runoff coefficients per local standards or TxDOT manual
  • Pre- vs. post-development runoff rates must not increase

7. KEY DOCUMENTS TO REFERENCE

State Documents:

  • TCEQ RG-348 (Technical Guidance)
  • TPDES Construction General Permit TXR150000
  • 30 TAC Chapters 213 (Edwards Aquifer) and 307 (Water Quality Standards)

Local Documents:

  • Wharton County Flood Damage Prevention Order
  • Wharton County Subdivision Regulations
  • Local drainage criteria (if published)
  • Floodplain Development Permit Application
  • County fee schedule

WHAT WOULD SURPRISE AN OUT-OF-STATE ENGINEER:

  1. No state-level stormwater management act - Unlike states with comprehensive stormwater laws, Texas relies primarily on TPDES implementation
  2. Limited state design standards - No statewide stormwater BMP manual; local jurisdictions have significant discretion
  3. No state wetland program - Texas is one of few states without state-level wetland regulations
  4. County-level authority - In unincorporated areas, counties have limited regulatory authority compared to other states
  5. Edwards Aquifer rules - While not applicable to Wharton County, the Edwards Aquifer rules create a unique regional regulatory framework in other parts of Texas

Note: Specific requirements should be verified with Wharton County Engineer's Office and TCEQ, as regulations may have been updated.

Recommended Next Steps

  1. Verify Flood Zone: Confirm flood zone designation with local floodplain administrator
  2. Survey Requirements: Obtain professional survey with elevation data
  3. Preliminary Consultation: Meet with local planning/permitting department
  4. Engineering Analysis: Engage qualified engineer for required studies
  5. Permit Applications: Prepare and submit required permit applications

Data Sources

  • Location Data: OpenStreetMap Nominatim
  • Flood Zone Data: FEMA NFHL (public MapServer)
  • Precipitation Data: NOAA Atlas 14 Precipitation Frequency Data Server
  • Analysis Date: 2025-09-08 14:04:13

This report is for preliminary analysis only. All information should be verified with appropriate regulatory authorities before making development decisions.