Plant Name: Kalamazoo Water Reclamation Plant (KWRP)
Location: 1415 North Harrison Street, Kalamazoo, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
Operating Authority: City of Kalamazoo Department of Public Services
Design Capacity: 53.3 MGD (Average Design Flow)
Current Average Flow: ~27 MGD
Population Served: Approx. 200,000 residents (Regional System)
Service Area: City of Kalamazoo and 18 surrounding jurisdictions (municipalities and townships)
Receiving Water Body: Kalamazoo River
NPDES Permit Number: MI0023299
Year Commissioned: 1954 (Major expansions in 1967, 1980s, and continuous upgrades)
The Kalamazoo Water Reclamation Plant (KWRP) is a cornerstone of environmental infrastructure in Southwest Michigan, serving as a regional hub for wastewater treatment. Unlike typical municipal facilities that handle predominantly domestic sewage, KWRP is distinguished by its unique influent profile, which includes a substantial industrial loading from the pharmaceutical (Pfizer) and paper manufacturing sectors. Operated by the City of Kalamazoo, this 53.3-MGD design capacity facility functions as a specialized utility, employing advanced High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge processes to manage high biological oxygen demand (BOD) loads.
Situated on the banks of the Kalamazoo River, the plant has evolved from a primary treatment facility commissioned in the 1950s to a sophisticated tertiary treatment complex. It plays a critical role in the remediation and protection of the Kalamazoo River watershed. Today, the facility is aggressive in its modernization efforts, balancing the maintenance of legacy infrastructure with the integration of modern SCADA automation, energy-efficient solids handling, and stringent nutrient removal strategies required by the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE).
The KWRP operates as a regional authority, accepting wastewater from a sprawling collection system that extends well beyond the city limits. The “Kalamazoo Regional Water and Wastewater System” includes 1,200 miles of collection piping and over 60 lift stations. The service area encompasses:
The plant is designed to handle substantial hydraulic and organic loads:
Treated effluent is discharged into the Kalamazoo River. The facility operates under a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit issued by Michigan EGLE. The Kalamazoo River is a sensitive receiving water body with strict Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) requirements, particularly regarding phosphorus, to prevent eutrophication and algal blooms downstream. The plant consistently achieves high compliance rates, often discharging effluent significantly cleaner than permit limits require.
The KWRP utilizes a complex treatment train capable of handling high-strength industrial waste. The process flow is categorized into Preliminary, Primary, Secondary (High-Purity Oxygen), and Tertiary treatment.
Raw wastewater enters the facility via large interceptors. The headworks aims to protect downstream equipment:
The physical separation of settleable solids occurs in rectangular primary clarifiers.
This is the most distinct technical feature of the KWRP. Unlike conventional aeration basins that use atmospheric air, KWRP utilizes a High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) Activated Sludge system (UNOX type design).
To meet stringent NPDES limits for suspended solids and phosphorus:
The final step before discharge:
KWRP operates a robust solids processing division, functioning partly as a resource recovery center.
The site covers extensive acreage along the riverfront. It includes the distinctive cryogenic plant structure (for oxygen generation), the incineration complex with emissions stacks, and an administration building housing the SCADA control center and NELAC-certified laboratory.
Given the plant’s proximity to urban areas and the nature of the industrial influent, odor control is a priority. The facility utilizes:
The City of Kalamazoo maintains a rolling Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) to address aging infrastructure. Recent and ongoing projects include:
The facility operates under strict limits set by Michigan EGLE (Permit MI0023299). Key parameters include:
KWRP manages one of Michigan’s most complex IPPs. The plant monitors and regulates discharges from major pharmaceutical manufacturers and paper mills. This includes surcharge programs for high-strength waste (BOD/TSS) and strict local limits for metals and specific organic compounds to prevent pass-through or interference with the biological process.
Like many Midwestern facilities, KWRP faces the challenge of replacing assets installed during the EPA grant boom of the 1970s and 80s. The current Capital Improvement Plan focuses heavily on “state of good repair” projects—replacing pumps, valves, and electrical gear before failure.
Michigan is a frontline state for PFAS regulation. KWRP is actively involved in source tracking to identify and reduce PFOS/PFOA entering the collection system, particularly from industrial plating or landfill leachate sources. The plant utilizes its IPP authority to mitigate these contaminants at the source, as conventional wastewater treatment does not remove PFAS.
As senior operators retire, the facility is focused on knowledge transfer and recruiting Class A licensed operators. The increasing technical complexity of the HPO system and incineration units requires specialized training beyond standard wastewater operations.
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Facility Type | Advanced Secondary (HPO) with Tertiary Filtration |
| Design Capacity (Average) | 53.3 MGD |
| Peak Hydraulic Capacity | ~90 MGD |
| Population Served | ~200,000 (Regional System) |
| Biological Process | High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) Activated Sludge |
| Oxygen Generation | On-site Cryogenic Air Separation |
| Tertiary Treatment | Rapid Gravity Sand Filters |
| Disinfection | Chlorination / Dechlorination |
| Solids Stabilization | Incineration (Thermal Reduction) |
| Solids Dewatering | Centrifuges / Belt Filter Presses |
| Receiving Water | Kalamazoo River |
| Service Area | City of Kalamazoo + 18 Municipalities |
| Year Commissioned | 1954 (Original), 1967/1980 (Major Expansions) |
1. Why does KWRP use High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) instead of conventional aeration?
The HPO system was selected to manage the high industrial organic loading (high BOD) from pharmaceutical and paper industries. Pure oxygen allows for a higher biomass concentration and faster oxygen transfer rates in a smaller tank volume compared to conventional air systems.
2. How does the plant achieve low phosphorus limits?
KWRP uses a dual approach: Chemical precipitation (typically utilizing ferric chloride or alum) in the primary and/or secondary stages, followed by tertiary sand filtration to remove particulate phosphorus.
3. Does the plant generate energy?
While the plant focuses on incineration for volume reduction rather than anaerobic digestion for biogas production, heat recovery systems are often employed within incineration processes to improve thermal efficiency.
4. How are biosolids handled?
Sludge is thickened, dewatered, and then incinerated. The resulting ash is landfilled. This method significantly reduces the volume of material requiring final disposal.
5. What is the “weird smell” sometimes near the plant?
Wastewater treatment naturally generates odors, primarily hydrogen sulfide (rotten egg smell). KWRP has installed extensive odor control scrubbers and carbon filters. However, atmospheric inversions or maintenance on scrubbers can sometimes allow odors to escape briefly.
6. Does the plant treat PFAS?
Conventional wastewater plants do not destroy PFAS. KWRP focuses on the Industrial Pretreatment Program (IPP) to stop PFAS at the source—identifying industrial users contributing PFAS and requiring them to treat it before discharging to the city sewer.
7. Who runs the plant?
The plant is owned and operated by the City of Kalamazoo Department of Public Services, but it functions as a regional utility serving 18 surrounding townships and cities.