BRENTWOOD — This month’s deadly flash flooding produced one question repeated around Brentwood: Did the city’s newly completed, $80 million flood project effectively help reduce the severity of the area’s latest brush with high water?
While viewpoints differed from place to place, perhaps no one was more grateful for the project, called Brentwood Bound, than those at the Fischer Window and Door Store. Though at least one company truck was ruined by the Nov. 5 flash flood, it could have been much worse. Water crept right up to the edge of the company’s loading dock but didn’t spill onto the floors of the business, as it has before.
The city’s recent mitigation work likely helped make that crucial difference, said Steve Marlo, a salesperson.
“It definitely did help,” said Marlo, adding that it “didn’t eliminate” flood risk there, but “it’s reduced it, significantly.”
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Morning walkers have a look at the aftermath of flooding from Deer Creek, left, on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, at the newly developed Brentwood Park. The park’s design increased and restored part of the creek’s natural floodplain to help mitigate flash flooding of developed areas.
The heavy rain and runoff, which caused widespread flooding in the region earlier this month, saw streams like Deer Creek and Black Creek jump their banks, flooding roads and closing major arteries such as Hanley Road and Manchester Road. Some parks, homes and businesses were inundated, including the Trainwreck Saloon, near Deer Creek in neighboring Rock Hill.
But around Brentwood’s busy Manchester corridor, many say they dodged a bullet — and some credit Brentwood Bound. A range of owners and employees say they avoided getting flooded, even though the water came frighteningly close in some cases. Where water made it inside, owners say it wasn’t as bad as in the past.
Billed by the city as a “solution to overcome flooding and public safety challenges” along Deer Creek and Manchester, Brentwood Bound includes the creation of a new, 32-acre park next to the creek that is “designed to contain water as the natural floodplain would.” And in areas on either side of the park, recent years have featured the removal of buildings from both Deer Creek’s floodplain and floodway — where floodwaters go — helping to make more space for high water to sprawl, with fewer properties in harm’s way.
“It’s a system that invites the water and holds it in a place that’s not a danger to anybody,” Alderman David Plufka said.
In the immediate aftermath of the flood, no thorough, scientific assessments of the Brentwood Bound project’s performance are available. But it appeared that it worked as designed, local officials said.
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Service manager Tom Coffman cuts drywall from flooded interior walls of Omni Refrigeration Services in Webster Groves on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024 after Deer Creek flooded the business late Monday. The building on Breckenridge Industrial Court, that last flooded in 2022, flooded again but the water receded quickly and left less mud. “That was the 1000 year flood,” said owner Mitch Lampe of the 2022 event.
“The creek has performed beautifully,” said Mayor David Dimmitt, adding that, next to the Brentwood Bound project, the waterway has handled heavy rain events without igniting flood problems that “absolutely” would have occurred in its absence, as recently as a few years ago.
Some others agree that it has helped move the needle in that spot, including the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District.
“It’s something that we believe will make things better,” said Sean Stone, an MSD spokesman. “I really commend them on what they’re doing.”
Still, not everyone in the area escaped trouble — leaving some feeling skeptical or underwhelmed about the project’s effectiveness.
This month’s floodwater came “too close for comfort” to the offices of Millennium Productions, an event planning company on Brentwood Industrial Drive, next to the downstream side of the Brentwood Bound project. The water didn’t get inside its building but reached up to the axle of a truck outside, said Tony Volkman, the company’s president.
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Doug Lampe mops the floors at his father Mitch Lampe’s Omni Refrigeration Services on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, after Deer Creek flooded the business on the Brentwood-Webster Groves border. The building on Breckenridge Industrial Court last flooded in 2022, as shown in photos of that flood hanging on the office wall.
“Any time it rains, this instantly becomes a lake,” Volkman said, describing the neighboring floodplain area. “We jokingly call it ‘Lake Millennium.’”
At Wild Nails, a “couple inches or so” of water got into the salon — but it came from the overwhelmed sewer along Manchester, not from Deer Creek. It was the fifth time the business has flooded since moving into the space in 2013 — enough to take a toll on owner Jason Le, whenever significant rain is in the forecast.
“I do not sleep well any time I look at the weather and it says that it’s raining,” he said. “I’ll stay up all night, at home.”
He thought, and hoped, the Brentwood Bound project might bring an end to the cycle.
“They say they hoped they were going to get the flooding issues resolved, but it’s still going on,” Le said.
Not far upstream from the Manchester corridor, Jennifer Lohman’s home on East Pacific Avenue, along the northern edge of Webster Groves, was hit by flooding — a “distressing” event, she said, given the project’s completion nearby.
“I had hoped Brentwood Bound would help more than that,” said Lohman, adding that she even made new investments in her home after hearing about the project.
Brentwood Bound, though, is only intended to help with flood issues in and along its immediate footprint, bounded roughly by Dorothy Avenue on its western side and Hanley Road to the east, and is not meant to have a halo effect that addresses flood problems across a wider radius, Dimmitt said.
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Flood debris piles up around a “Welcome to Brentwood” sign alongside Black Creek, close to its intersection with Deer Creek, near Hanley and Manchester roads, on Monday, Nov. 11, 2024.
Furthermore, officials said that urban flood projects of that scale can only do so much in the face of such significant rainfall, like the amounts that struck the region early this month.
Areas along Deer Creek have lengthy histories of flooding, with problems stretching back a half-century, Dimmitt said. But local residents victimized by repeated bouts of high water say those issues have gotten worse in recent years, especially since flooding caused by remnants of Hurricane Ike in 2008.
Broader trends also speak to rising flood risks. Major downpours are becoming more common, aided by a warming climate that enables the atmosphere to hold more moisture, while prevailing development trends exacerbate runoff that can quickly overwhelm waterways.
“When you have all that impervious surface and you have all that rain ... that water has to go somewhere,” Dimmitt said.
With work on Brentwood Bound complete, the city said it has no plans for additional flood projects.
“We did a lot. There’s really nothing on the horizon for us,” Dimmitt said.
And he feels comfortable with the current level of flood protection, he said, given how the Brentwood Bound area has fared in recent floods — including during an episode of record rainfall in 2022, when it was only partially built.
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A dead fish sits on top of landscaping twine near Deer Creek at Brentwood Park on Monday, Nov. 11, 2024, in Brentwood.
“It has passed that test every single time, even at 70% completion,” he said. “I’m confident that we’re going to be fine.”
For some, though, the latest episode of flooding reinforces some longstanding critiques of local approaches to flood policy. Some area residents and repeat flood victims, for instance, say that, even though municipalities like Brentwood have invested heavily in combating some localized flood issues, a broader, coordinated effort is missing throughout the Deer Creek watershed and across the St. Louis region.
“There should be one authority,” said Lohman, adding that the area’s fragmentation “causes all kinds of problems.”
Doug Plowman checks to see if flood water got inside his son's home in Pacific, as the Meramec River flooded parts of town. Video by Laurie Skrivan, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Photos: Record rains cause flash floods. Rising rivers are swamping parts of Missouri
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Brookdale Farms draft horse Spartan romps in the flood waters from the Meramec and Big rivers, which shut down operations at the event facility on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024. James Vavak, general manager, said 250 of the farm’s 300 acres were flooded. “It’s a beautiful view but it’s going to leave a mess behind,” said Vavak. “We’ll see what else Mother Nature throws my way.”
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"I think we got lucky," said Doug Plowman, who checks on his son's home on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024, in Pacific. The Meramec River crested below the original forecast.
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Wayne Adams, facility manager at Family Golf and Learning Center in St. Louis County, talks to managers as he looks over the flooded driving range targets as the Meramec River crested early on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024.
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Highland cattle Pebbles, left, and Bam Bam, residents of Brookdale Farms near Eureka, enjoy floodwater from the confluence of the Meramec and Big rivers as it begins to recede on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024. James Vavak, general manager of the event facility, said that an upcoming weekend wedding had to be moved after 250 of the farm’s 300 acres were flooded. “It’s a beautiful view but it’s going to leave a mess behind,” said Vavak. “We’ll see what else Mother Nature throws my way.”
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“I think we got lucky,” said Doug Plowman, as he calls his son on the phone to tell him that only a few inches of water got into the basement of his son’s home on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024, in Pacific. The Meramec River crested below the original forecast.
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"We are just seeing the light of the situation," said Robert Brownlee, left, who hunts for worms with his roommate Steve Johnson in the aftermath of flooding from the Meramec River on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024, in Pacific.
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Robert Brownlee hunts for worms in the aftermath of the flooding Friday, Nov. 8, 2024, in Pacific. The Meramec River crested below the original forecast.
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Flooded vehicles are left behind on Twin River Road at Highway W near Eureka as the confluence of the Meramec and Big rivers shut down the area to traffic on Friday, Nov. 8, 2024.
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“I’ve been up all night,” says Jeff Forbus, who was moving items from his yard and sheds into his house on Thursday before the Meramec River crests in Pacific.
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An RV camper is lodged against a pillar of the old Route 66 Bridge as a rising Meramec River floods Route 66 State Park near Eureka on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024.
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Zander Beckerdite, 7, fills sand bags with Pacific School Resource Officer Nicolas Winchester, left, on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, as a rising Meramec River is expected to flood parts of Pacific.
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"The water is coming up," said Sara Brundick, left, sandbags the doorway of her house with help from friends including Sarah Dubuque on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, before the Meramec River crests in Pacific.
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"I've been up all night," said Jeff Forbus, who moves items from his shed into his house on higher ground on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, before the Meramec River crests in Pacific.
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"I am getting nervous. This is my first flood," said Sierra Haug, who waits for a friend arrive so she and her roommate can move their furniture before they leave their house on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, before the Meramec River crests in Pacific.
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Lynn Whitson loads up items from his house onto a trailer lent by his friend Keith Neustaedter, left, on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024, before the Meramec River crests in Pacific. Whitson and his roommate plan to evacuate before the flood hits.
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The entrance to Route 66 State Park near Eureka is underwater from the flooding Meramec River on Thursday, Nov. 7.
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Missouri Department of Transportation workers close Highway 141 under Interstate 44 near Valley Park as floodwater from the Meramec River begins to fill the lowlying underpass in St. Louis County on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024.
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Doug Wurst was among those filling sandbags on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, to prepare for flooding in Pacific, Mo. As the Meramec River continued to rise, officials urged residents to evacuate parts of the city.
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Part of the damage left at Montauk State Park on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. The park was hit by 12.59 inches of rain on Monday and Tuesday.
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Doug Lampe mops the floors at his father Mitch Lampe’s Omni Refrigeration Services on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, after Deer Creek flooded the business on the Brentwood-Webster Groves border. The building on Breckenridge Industrial Court last flooded in 2022, as shown in photos of that flood hanging on the office wall.
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Michael Lillard tosses ruined beer stored in the basement of the Trainwreck Saloon in Rock Hill on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024 after Deer Creek flooded the business late Monday. George Hansford’s business flooded twice in 2022 and he said this was the second worst flood, with 18 inches filling the bar and restaurant. He hopes to reopen this weekend.
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Morning walkers have a look at the aftermath of flooding from Deer Creek, left, on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, at the newly developed Brentwood Park. The park’s design increased and restored part of the creek’s natural floodplain to help mitigate flash flooding of developed areas.
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David Hill climbs over ruined cases of beer removed from the basement of the Trainwreck Saloon in Rock Hill on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024 after Deer Creek flooded the business late Monday. George Hansford’s business flooded twice in 2022 and he said this was the second worst flood since he bought it in 1982, with 18 inches filling the bar and restaurant. He hopes to reopen this weekend.
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Mitch Lampe, owner of Omni Refrigeration Services in Webster Groves, cleans up after more than a foot of floodwater from Deer Creek filled his business late Monday, on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. The building on Breckenridge Industrial Court, that last flooded in 2022, flooded again but the water receded quickly and left less mud. “That was the 1000 year flood,” said Lampe, of the 2022 event.
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Michael Lillard, left, and David Hill remove ruined beer kegs from the basement of the Trainwreck Saloon in Rock Hill on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, after Deer Creek flooded the business. Owner George Hansford, whose business flooded twice in 2022, said this was the second-worst flood since he bought it in 1982, with 18 inches filling the bar and restaurant.
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Service manager Tom Coffman cuts drywall from flooded interior walls of Omni Refrigeration Services in Webster Groves on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024 after Deer Creek flooded the business late Monday. The building on Breckenridge Industrial Court, that last flooded in 2022, flooded again but the water receded quickly and left less mud. “That was the 1000 year flood,” said owner Mitch Lampe of the 2022 event.
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State workers at Montauk State Park clean up concrete rearing pools on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, one day after massive rains washed over the berm and released an untold number of rainbow trout into the Current River.
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A maintenance truck drives through floodwaters on northbound I-55 as southbound cars drive on the shoulder near Union Road in St. Louis County on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.
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Police block Hoffmeister Avenue near the I-55 northbound ramp off Union Road in St. Louis County after heavy rains flooded the area Nov. 5, 2024.
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“It’s a heck of a way to celebrate my birthday,” says Kurt Tweedy, after waking up to discover his flooded vehicle outside Station House apartments just north of Skinker and Olive boulevards on Tuesday morning, Nov. 5, 2024 in the West End area of St. Louis. Tweedy is 34 today.
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A flooded minivan sits in high water under the MetroLink overpass near Skinker and Olive boulevards on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024 in St. Louis. At one point, the vehicle was completely underwater. A short time later, a sewer unclogged and the intersection drained.
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An RV camper is lodged in a pillar of the old Route 66 Bridge as a rising Meramec River floods Route 66 State Park near Eureka on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024.
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Motorists drive through Meramec River floodwater covering Soccer Park Road near Fenton on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024.