The City of Bend Water Reclamation Facility (WRF) serves as a critical infrastructure asset for Central Oregon, operating within a unique high-desert hydrological context. Unlike many municipal facilities that discharge to surface waters, the Bend WRF operates as a zero-direct-discharge facility, relying on advanced treatment, evaporation, and percolation to return treated effluent to the regional aquifer. This operational model is driven by the stringent environmental requirements of the Deschutes River Basin and the region’s volcanic geology.
Located northeast of the city limits, the facility manages wastewater for a service area population exceeding 100,000 in one of the fastest-growing municipalities in the United States. Following a comprehensive $46 million upgrade completed in 2012, the plant transitioned to an Integrated Fixed-Film Activated Sludge (IFAS) process. This technological leap allowed the utility to increase hydraulic capacity and enhance nutrient removal efficiency within the existing facility footprint, setting a benchmark for facility intensification strategies in the Pacific Northwest.
The WRF serves the City of Bend’s Urban Growth Boundary (UGB), a region characterized by rapid residential expansion and a growing commercial sector. The collection system spans over 270 miles of gravity sewer mains and includes approximately 14 major sewage lift stations required to navigate the city’s variable topography. A significant ongoing initiative is the “Septic to Sewer” program, designed to decommission thousands of private septic systems that pose a risk to groundwater quality, progressively adding these connections to the centralized treatment network.
The facility is designed to handle a Maximum Month Flow (MMF) of 12.5 MGD, with hydraulic peaks significantly higher to accommodate storm events, although Bend utilizes a separated storm sewer system. Current average daily flows (ADF) fluctuate between 6.5 and 7.5 MGD. The plant experiences notable seasonal variations, with lower flows during winter months and peak hydraulic loading during summer irrigation seasons and tourism spikes. Historical trends indicate a steady flow increase correlating with the city’s 3-5% annual population growth rate.
The Bend WRF operates under a Water Pollution Control Facilities (WPCF) permit issued by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ). The facility does not discharge directly to the Deschutes River. Instead, effluent is managed through:
The Bend WRF utilizes a sophisticated treatment train centered around the IFAS process to achieve high-level nitrogen removal and robust BOD reduction.
Raw influent enters the headworks where it passes through mechanical bar screens (typically 6mm spacing) to remove large debris, rags, and plastics. Following screening, flow velocity is reduced in vortex grit chambers, allowing inorganic solids (sand, gravel, coffee grounds) to settle. The removed grit and screenings are washed, compacted, and disposed of at the local landfill. The headworks is fully enclosed and equipped with chemical scrubbers for odor control to mitigate nuisance for nearby developments.
Wastewater flows to primary clarifiers where gravity settling removes approximately 60-70% of Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and 30-40% of Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD). Primary sludge is pumped to the solids handling train, while scum is skimmed from the surface. The hydraulic retention time in this stage prepares the influent carbon-to-nitrogen ratio for the biological stage.
The core of the Bend WRF is the Integrated Fixed-Film Activated Sludge (IFAS) system. During the 2011 upgrades, the city selected IFAS technology to expand capacity without building new aeration basins.
A portion of the secondary effluent is diverted to the tertiary treatment train to produce Class A recycled water. This process utilizes cloth media disk filters (e.g., AquaAerobics AquaDisk or similar technology). These filters provide a physical barrier to remove remaining suspended solids and turbidity, ensuring the water meets the stringent clarity requirements for unrestricted urban irrigation.
The facility employs chlorination for disinfection.
Solids processing is a major energy recovery component of the plant:
The facility occupies a substantial footprint north of the city near the Bend Municipal Airport. The site includes the main treatment process buildings, an administration/laboratory complex, maintenance shops, and extensive acreage dedicated to the evaporation/percolation pond system. The percolation ponds are rotated in service to allow for drying and scarification, maintaining infiltration rates.
The Bend WRF is a leader in energy recovery. The facility utilizes a Combined Heat and Power (CHP) system. Biogas produced in the anaerobic digesters is scrubbed and fed into cogeneration engines. These engines generate electricity to offset grid consumption and produce waste heat, which is captured via heat exchangers to maintain the temperature of the digesters and heat facility buildings during Central Oregon’s cold winters.
Given the proximity to expanding residential zones, odor control is paramount. The facility utilizes biofilters—beds of organic media (wood chips/bark) that facilitate the biological oxidation of odorous compounds like hydrogen sulfide. Key sources of odor, including the headworks and solids handling building, are maintained under negative pressure with foul air routed to these biofiltration units.
Cost: ~$46 Million
Scope: This pivotal project transformed the facility from a conventional activated sludge plant to an IFAS facility. The primary driver was the need to increase capacity from roughly 6 MGD to 12.5 MGD without constructing massive new aeration basins. The project included the installation of IFAS media, screens, and aeration grid upgrades, along with improvements to the headworks and electrical distribution systems.
Result: The upgrade successfully doubled treatment capacity within the existing biological reactor footprint and improved nitrogen removal reliability.
The City continues to invest in the facility through its Capital Improvement Plan (CIP). Recent and current projects include:
Operating under an Oregon DEQ WPCF permit, the primary compliance objective is the protection of the Deschutes Basin aquifer. The permit stipulates strict limits on Total Nitrogen (TN) discharge to prevent nitrate contamination of the groundwater, which eventually communicates with surface waters. The IFAS system is specifically tuned to maximize denitrification (conversion of nitrate to nitrogen gas) to meet these agronomic loading rates.
The Class A reuse permit requires continuous monitoring of turbidity (typically < 2 NTU) and chlorine residual. The facility maintains a robust compliance record, providing safe irrigation water that offsets potable water demand during the arid summer months.
Bend’s population growth presents a continuous hydraulic loading challenge. The “Septic to Sewer” program, while environmentally necessary, accelerates the rate at which flow reaches the plant. Future planning involves evaluating the ultimate build-out capacity of the percolation ponds, which are geologically constrained.
Like all modern WRFs, Bend is monitoring regulatory developments regarding PFAS (Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances). As a facility discharging to groundwater, the fate and transport of these persistent chemicals are of future regulatory concern.
The City’s “One Water” approach aims to maximize the use of recycled water. Future master plans evaluate expanding the distribution network for Class A water to additional golf courses, parks, and potential industrial users to further reduce groundwater withdrawal.
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Facility Type | Advanced Secondary (IFAS) with Tertiary Filtration |
| Design Capacity (Max Month) | 12.5 MGD |
| Secondary Treatment | Integrated Fixed-Film Activated Sludge (IFAS) |
| Biomass Media | Free-floating plastic carriers |
| Tertiary Treatment | Cloth Media Disk Filtration (for Reuse stream) |
| Disinfection | Chlorination (Contact Chambers) |
| Nutrient Removal | Biological Nitrogen Removal (Nitrification/Denitrification) |
| Solids Stabilization | Mesophilic Anaerobic Digestion |
| Dewatering | Belt Filter Presses |
| Biosolids Class | Class B (Land Applied) |
| Effluent Disposal | Rapid Infiltration/Evaporation Ponds & Class A Reuse |
| Energy Recovery | Cogeneration (CHP) utilizing Digester Biogas |
| Control System | SCADA (Allen-Bradley/Rockwell Architecture) |
Q: Why was IFAS selected over MBR for the upgrade?
A: IFAS was selected primarily for its ability to retrofit into existing aeration basins, significantly increasing capacity and nitrification performance without the high civil costs of building new basins or the high energy consumption associated with Membrane Bioreactors (MBR).
Q: Does the facility discharge to the Deschutes River?
A: No. The facility is a zero-discharge plant regarding surface waters. All effluent is disposed of via evaporation, percolation into the groundwater table, or beneficial reuse.
Q: What is the target Total Nitrogen limit?
A: While specific permit limits vary by season and flow, the process is designed to reduce nitrogen to levels safe for groundwater recharge, typically targeting effluent Nitrate-N well below the drinking water standard of 10 mg/L.
Q: Does the plant smell?
A: The City employs advanced biofiltration systems to scrub foul air from the headworks and solids handling areas. While wastewater treatment inherently involves odors, these systems capture 99% of odorous compounds.
Q: Where does the recycled water go?
A: The Class A recycled water is currently pumped to the Bend Golf and Country Club for irrigation and is also available at a fill station for construction trucks to use for dust control.