The Water Authority’s xeriscape rebate program, and predecessor programs run by the city of Albuquerque, have seen about 12 million square feet of turf replaced over the past 25 or so years. Since 2009, the top five years for program participation were:
This has contributed to a reduction in daily per capita water consumption from 250+ gallons in the mid-1990s to about 124 today. Replacement of turf with desert-friendly landscapes has always been a key component of Albuquerque’s multidecade conservation drive and of the Water Authority’s 100-year management plan, WATER 2120, which was adopted in 2016. Now, we’ve joined other Western water utilities in committing to pursue removal of 30% of remaining “non-functional” turf in our respective service areas over the next several years. That does NOT mean the wholesale removal of cherished green spaces in the name of saving water. Parks, ballfields and children’s backyard play areas are great places to have grass. Parking lots, median strips and emerald-green front yards are often a different story — and their owners may be able to save water and money by voluntarily exploring xeric alternatives.
To qualify for rebates, those alternatives must include landscape plans that are rich in climate appropriate trees, shrubs and plants. The idea isn’t to just pave over a patch of grass, replace it with gravel or let it revert to unsightly weeds. Plants and trees aren’t just pretty to look at: They create shade that reduces the “heat sink” effect — and the demand for water. So, yes, we want to “get off the lawn.” Doing so will help us meet important conservation goals. But we can do it in a way that preserves the benefits that functional turf and green spaces can offer.
Check out some of our recent projects:
Paradise Hills Golf Course
Project timeline: 2011-2022
Total landscape transformation: 1.4 million sq. ft.
Water savings to date: 350 million gallons
Rebate amount: $1.4 million
Total plants: Over 10,000
Plant types: Turpentine bush, Afghan pine, chaste tree, sand sage, desert willow, chamisa, Apache plume, yellow yucca, threadgrass
Paradise Hills Golf Course (formerly known as Desert Greens Golf Course), a private country club on Albuquerque’s northwest side, had been served since its construction in 1962 by a private water utility charging artificially low, subsidized rates. When the Water Authority acquired the private utility in 2009 and began charging ordinance-based rates, the course’s operating costs increased significantly. With its business model no longer tenable, Desert Greens was in danger of shutting down. Fortunately, help arrived in the form of the Water Authority’s xeriscape rebate program, which Desert Greens used to finance the removal of turf from non-playable irrigated areas. By 2021, the golf course had transformed nearly 1.4 million square feet of turf into xeric landscapes, conserved more than 350 million gallons of water, and — key to the course’s survival — saved over $2 million in water bills. The end result is an aesthetically pleasing, targeted-play course that patrons love — and which can continue to operate at a profit.
Dr. J. Patrick Garcia (APS) Transportation/Education Complex
Project timeline: 2022
Total landscape transformation: 15,670 sq. ft.
Water savings to date: 996,072 gallons
Rebate amount: $31,340
Total plants: 246
Plant types: Lacebark elm, Afghan pine, Chinese pistache, crabapple, desert willow, skyrocket oak, juniper trees, beargrass, valley cottonwood, pinon pine, wall germander, banana yucca
La Luz HOA Medians
Project timeline: 2021-2022
Total landscape transformation: 9,000 sq. ft.
Water savings to date: 1,043,287 gallons
Rebate amount: $13,500
Total plants: 162
Plant types: Lacebark elm, escarpment live oak, frontier elm, Oklahoma redbud, crape myrtle, turpentine bush, blue grama, Chinese pistache, catmint
Commercial Office Park
Project timeline: 2023
Total landscape transformation: 1,540 sq. ft.
Water savings to date: 83,645 gallons
Rebate amount: $3,080
Total plants: 134
Plant types: Creeping germander, dwarf plumbago, golden columbine, turpentine bush, little bluestem, English lavender, ornamental pear, London plane tree
Westcliffe HOA
Project timeline: 2020-2021
Total landscape transformation: 7,558 sq. ft.
Water savings to date: 2,189,127 gallons
Rebate amount: $15,651
Total plants: 24
Plant types: Crape myrtle, gray lavender, Texas ranger, turpentine bush, Apache plume, chamisa
Prospectors Ridge HOA
Project timeline: 2018-2023
Total landscape transformation: 34,440 sq. ft.
Water savings to date: 2,823,830 gallons
Rebate amount: $62,063
Total plants: 700
Plant types: Cherry sage, Allee elm, Modesto ash, butterfly bush, rose of Sharon, golden rain tree, bird of paradise, winter jasmine, rosemary, catmint, mesquite (honey and screwbean)