Say Goodbye to Lawns in Drying U.S. West Mark Marlowe, who directs the water supply for fast-growing Castle Rock, a Denver suburb, has a dim view of lawns. Irrigating grass in summer consumes 40 percent of Castle Rock’s water. And unlike water used indoors, outdoor water cannot be recycled. Marlowe is not reticent in articulating his disdain. Earlier this spring, he told a group of Colorado legislators, “I think of grass in Colorado as an invasive species — something we want to get rid of.” In drawing a new battle line for providing water in his city of 80,000 residents, four times as many as in 2000, Marlowe is candidly attacking a residential amenity now viewed as an impairment that can be eliminated. “America has adopted grass,” Marlowe told the group. “We’ve done an amazing job of making the average person feel like if you don’t have a beautiful green Kentucky bluegrass lawn and a big mower, you haven’t made it in this country. It’s crazy.” By no means is Marlowe’s attack on grass isolated. Water managers and elected officials across the American West are trying to undo that crazy as they reckon with the region’s existential confrontation: how to supply ever scarcer water to some of the nation’s fastest growing cities (Denver, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Austin, San Antonio) and their even faster-growing outer-ring suburbs (Queen Creek, Arizona; Castle Rock, Colorado; Georgetown, Texas; Herriman, Utah). How, they ask, should a dry-region city grow? Or should steps be taken to limit growth? |