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What Does Colorado Springs’ MS4 Stormwater Permit Mean for Your Next Repaving Project?

What Does Colorado Springs’ MS4 Stormwater Permit Mean for Your Next Repaving Project?

June 23, 2026

Colorado Springs’ MS4 stormwater permit is a regulatory authorization governing how stormwater runoff is managed and discharged through the city’s Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System, and it directly shapes the scope, cost, and compliance requirements of commercial repaving projects. This guide covers the MS4 permit framework and its triggers for repaving, construction-phase and post-construction BMP

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What Are the Asphalt Maintenance Priorities for High-Turnover Retail Centers Along Academy Boulevard?

What Are the Asphalt Maintenance Priorities for High-Turnover Retail Centers Along Academy Boulevard?

June 23, 2026

Asphalt maintenance for high-turnover retail centers along Academy Boulevard is a structured program of preventive treatments, severity-based repairs, and long-term planning designed to protect pavement under Colorado Springs’ uniquely harsh conditions. This guide covers Academy Boulevard’s environmental and traffic stressors, common pavement distresses in retail lots, severity-based repair prioritization, seasonal scheduling, the revenue impact of

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How Do You Navigate Colorado Springs’ Updated Drainage Criteria Manual for Commercial Paving?

How Do You Navigate Colorado Springs’ Updated Drainage Criteria Manual for Commercial Paving?

June 22, 2026

Colorado Springs’ updated Drainage Criteria Manual (DCM) is the city’s consolidated regulatory document governing stormwater detention, water quality treatment, erosion control, and best management practices for all commercial development and redevelopment sites. It carries binding enforcement authority under the city’s MS4 Permit, Consent Decree, and Intergovernmental Agreement with Pueblo County. This guide covers the manual’s

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Why Do Expansive Clay Soils Cause Parking-Lot Heaving Across the Pikes Peak Region?

Why Do Expansive Clay Soils Cause Parking-Lot Heaving Across the Pikes Peak Region?

June 22, 2026

Expansive clay soil heaving in the Pikes Peak region is the upward displacement of parking-lot pavement caused by moisture-sensitive clay minerals in the subgrade that swell when wet and shrink when dry. The Pierre Shale and Dawson formations underlying much of Colorado Springs contain montmorillonite, smectite, and illite clays capable of generating forces that far

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