The Southerly Wastewater Treatment Center (Southerly) stands as the largest of the three wastewater treatment facilities operated by the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District (NEORSD). Located in the Village of Cuyahoga Heights, this critical infrastructure asset provides advanced wastewater treatment for a service area covering more than 600,000 residents across the Greater Cleveland area. Commissioned originally in 1928 and substantially expanded over the decades, Southerly is a cornerstone of the region’s environmental health.
With a design average flow of 125 million gallons per day (MGD) and a wet-weather peak capacity of 735 MGD, Southerly plays a pivotal role in managing combined sewer overflows (CSOs) through the District’s “Project Clean Lake” initiative. The facility is renowned in the industry for its state-of-the-art Renewable Energy Facility (REF), which utilizes fluidized bed incineration to process biosolids and generate electricity, setting a national benchmark for sustainable utility management.
Southerly serves the largest geographic area of NEORSD’s facilities, covering approximately 64 square miles. The service basin encompasses the southern and eastern suburbs of Cleveland, as well as portions of the city itself. The collection system feeding Southerly includes a complex network of interceptors, including the Southerly Interceptor and the Mill Creek Tunnel system. The demographics of the service area are mixed, comprising dense residential zones, significant commercial corridors, and heavy industrial sectors, necessitating a robust treatment train capable of handling variable influent characteristics.
The facility operates as an advanced secondary treatment plant with tertiary filtration capabilities. Its hydraulic profile is designed to handle extreme variations due to the region’s combined sewer system:
In recent years, the average daily flow has hovered between 100 and 120 MGD. The plant serves as the termination point for major deep tunnel projects designed to capture combined sewage, requiring high-capacity pump stations to lift flow from substantial depths for treatment.
Treated effluent is discharged into the Cuyahoga River, a designated American Heritage River. The plant operates under an Ohio EPA National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit, adhering to strict limits on Carbonaceous Biochemical Oxygen Demand (CBOD), Total Suspended Solids (TSS), Ammonia-Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and E. coli. Southerly’s performance has been instrumental in the biological resurgence of the Cuyahoga River, contributing to the return of fish species that had vanished from the ecosystem decades ago.
Raw wastewater enters the headworks where it passes through mechanical bar screens (0.75-inch opening) to remove large debris, rags, and plastics. Following screening, the flow enters aerated grit tanks. These tanks reduce the velocity of the water, allowing inorganic solids like sand, gravel, and coffee grounds to settle while keeping organic matter in suspension. The removed grit is washed and dewatered before landfill disposal. This stage also includes significant odor control infrastructure, utilizing chemical scrubbers to mitigate H2S emissions.
The screened and degritted wastewater flows into large circular primary settling tanks. Here, gravity separation occurs; heavier solids settle to the bottom as primary sludge, while grease and oils float to the surface for skimming. Southerly’s primary treatment is designed to remove approximately 60-70% of suspended solids and 30-40% of BOD. During extreme wet weather events exceeding secondary capacity, excess flow may receive primary treatment and disinfection before blending or discharge, per permit allowances.
Southerly utilizes a distinct two-stage biological treatment process, differing from the conventional single-stage activated sludge systems found at many municipal plants. This configuration provides process stability and high removal efficiencies.
To ensure consistent compliance with strict effluent limits, particularly regarding solids and phosphorus, the plant employs tertiary gravity sand filters. These dual-media filters polish the secondary effluent, removing remaining suspended solids and particulate-bound pollutants. This stage is essential for maintaining water quality during low-flow river conditions.
Disinfection is achieved using liquid sodium hypochlorite (bleach) to inactivate pathogenic organisms. Due to the sensitivity of the aquatic life in the receiving Cuyahoga River, the effluent must be dechlorinated using sodium bisulfite prior to final discharge. This chlorination/dechlorination process is typically required during the recreation season (May through October).
Southerly is home to the Renewable Energy Facility (REF), a cutting-edge biosolids management center. The process flow includes:
The Southerly site spans approximately 280 acres in Cuyahoga Heights. The complex includes administrative offices, a fully certified water quality laboratory, extensive maintenance shops, and the massive REF structure. The layout is bifurcated by the Cuyahoga River and a railroad corridor, requiring internal bridges and careful logistical planning for utility piping.
Energy management is a core focus at Southerly. The plant consumes approximately 90-100 million kWh annually. The REF is the centerpiece of the energy strategy, capable of generating approximately 2 to 4 MW of electricity depending on loading conditions. Additionally, the facility has implemented VFDs (Variable Frequency Drives) on major aeration blowers and pumping systems to optimize consumption.
A critical piece of infrastructure located at the site is the Tunnel Dewatering Pump Station. This facility lifts flow from the massive underground storage tunnels (constructed as part of Project Clean Lake) roughly 200 feet up to the headworks for treatment. The TDPS has a capacity of 160 MGD, allowing the District to dewater tunnels rapidly between storm events to regain storage capacity.
As part of ongoing wet weather management strategies, the District is optimizing primary treatment performance during peak flow events. This involves the addition of coagulants and polymers to increase settling velocities, allowing the plant to treat higher hydraulic loads through the primary batteries without washing out solids.
Southerly operates under NPDES Permit No. 3PA00002*MD (subject to renewal cycles). Key parameters include:
NEORSD is under a federal Consent Decree to reduce CSOs from 4.5 billion gallons annually to under 500 million gallons by 2036. Southerly is the treatment terminus for much of the gray infrastructure (tunnels) built under this $3 billion program. The plant’s ability to ramp up flows rapidly and treat stored tunnel water is the linchpin of this compliance strategy.
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Facility Name | Southerly Wastewater Treatment Center |
| Operating Authority | Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District (NEORSD) |
| Design Average Flow | 125 MGD |
| Peak Hydraulic Capacity | 735 MGD |
| Secondary Treatment Capacity | 400 MGD |
| Treatment Process | Screening, Grit Removal, Primary Settling, Two-Stage Activated Sludge, Tertiary Filtration |
| Biosolids Technology | Fluidized Bed Incineration with Energy Recovery |
| Energy Generation | Steam Turbine Generator (~2-4 MW capacity) |
| Service Area | 64 Square Miles (Greater Cleveland) |
| Population Served | > 600,000 |
| Receiving Water | Cuyahoga River (Lake Erie Basin) |
| Disinfection | Chlorination / Dechlorination (Sodium Hypochlorite/Bisulfite) |
| Commissioned | 1928 (Major expansions in 1970s and 2010s) |
| Site Size | ~280 Acres |