Waste, energy and water

Explainer: What is a raingarden?

Learn about stormwater pollutants and how raingardens are designed to thwart them

RainGardens-highres-5680-crop

How raingardens work.
How raingardens work.

The city has one of the oldest sewerage and stormwater drainage infrastructures in Australia. But these days, we have raingardens to slow down and filter pollution so it doesn’t harm our waterways.

Learn about stormwater pollutants and how raingardens are designed to thwart them.

Down the drain

Every year, nearly 3,000 tonnes of stormwater pollutants make their way into our waterways. That includes chemicals from car washing and oil from cars, leaves and garden clippings and plastic litter. It also captures cigarette butts, excess grease trap oil from restaurants, dog poo and overflows from the sewerage system.

This can lead to bacteria and viruses in our water, make waterways cloudy and suffocate fish, affect the health of birds and other animals and photosynthesis in plants.

But raingardens are a natural oasis protecting Sydney Harbour and Botany Bay from harmful pollutants.

These grasses are natural water filters.
These grasses are natural water filters.

A beautiful green garden with a big job

Raingardens are garden beds that slow and clean stormwater before it drains to our waterways. They’re usually found in street corners where cars can’t park. Raingardens have more grass-like shrubbery than usual roadside plantings. They’re set in lowered beds and over drain grills.

Raingardens use water-tolerant plants such as knotted club rush (Isolepis nodosa), basket grass (Lomandra longifolia), tropic belle (Lomandra hystrix) and native rosemary (Westringia fruiticosa). These plants have special filtering qualities.

The gardens are also planted with layers of materials including sandy soil and recycled crushed glass to filter rubbish and grab nutrients. Because the gardens are lowered and layered, they reduce the risk of flooding by slowing stormwater from entering the underground drainage system when there is a heavy rain. This also makes raingardens self-watering.

Rosebery is home to this raingarden.
Rosebery is home to this raingarden.

Where to spot them

If you’re walking around Camperdown, Chippendale, Darlinghurst, Erskineville, Glebe, or other areas in the inner city, keep an eye out. We have 154 raingardens so far and counting.

We aim to reduce 50% of sediments and suspended solids and 15% of nutrients that flow into our waterways via stormwater runoff by 2030.

We have 154 raingardens so far and counting.
We have 154 raingardens so far and counting.

Published 4 December 2017, updated 8 March 2019