Peoria and Phoenix water projects named Arizona’s best
24th St. Water Treatment Plant rehabilitation and Beardsley Road Water Reclamation Facility expansion recognized for efficiency, innovation, and reliability
Release Date: May 13, 2026
Release Date: May 13, 2026

24th Street Water Treatment Plant, Phoenix, Arizona
PHOENIX, May 13, 2026 – The Arizona Water Association (AZ Water) has selected the City of Phoenix’s 24th St. Water Treatment Plant Rehabilitation and the City of Peoria’s Beardsley Road Water Reclamation Facility Expansion as 2026 Projects of the Year. The awards were presented during AZ Water’s 99th Annual Conference & Exhibition in Phoenix.
AZ Water’s Projects of the Year Awards highlight water and wastewater projects that set high standards for planning, design, construction, and operations. The awards recognize collaborative project teams and solutions that help utilities meet growth, reliability, and water quality goals while delivering dependable service to the communities they serve.
In operation for 70 years and centrally located in Phoenix‘s distribution system, the 24th Street Water Treatment Plant is a critical source of supply, helping one of the country’s fastest growing cities meet increased demands and mitigate drought conditions. Although permitted in the 1990s to treat 140 million gallons per day (MGD), the plant’s practical production capacity had been limited to around 120 MGD.
Rather than expanding treatment capacity through new basin construction, the City of Phoenix, Carollo Engineers, and PCL Construction focused on unlocking the plant’s existing potential. Through hydraulic modeling, field testing, and plant staff input, the team identified targeted improvements including upgraded piping, new turning vanes, and expanded flow paths to reduce bottlenecks and restore the facility to its full rated capacity of 140 MGD without expanding its footprint.
The rehabilitation also included chemical unloading and safety improvements, solids-handling upgrades including a new sludge equalization basin, gravity thickener improvements, emergency dewatered cake overflow storage, and sewer discharge capacity enhancements. The project was completed on schedule and within its $10 million budget, compared to the $100 million a traditional basin expansion would have required.
Beyond capacity, the project strengthens Phoenix’s water supply resiliency as Colorado River cutbacks approach.
“This project shows that smart investment in existing infrastructure can deliver more capacity, greater reliability, and continued water security for our customers,” said City of Phoenix Project Manager Lingxiao Wang. “The project team’s focus on targeted, high-impact improvements, executed with safety and continuity of service as top priorities, is a model of what’s possible when owners, designers, and contractors work together toward a shared goal.”
The Beardsley Road Water Reclamation Facility (WRF) has reliably served the City of Peoria since the 1990s. With population growth driving higher flows, and a citywide beneficial reuse program being planned, Peoria expanded the facility from 4 MGD to 6 MGD, rehabilitated aging assets, and kept the plant operating throughout construction.
Delivered through a progressive design-build partnership between Carollo Engineers and MGC Contractors, the project was structured in multiple packages, allowing the City to align spending with available funding, manage risk, and adapt to pandemic-related challenges.
Key upgrades span the full treatment process, including headworks, aeration basins, clarifiers, filtration, disinfection, and odor control. Arizona’s first installation of InDENSE™ biomass densification technology improved process performance and, combined with value engineering, eliminated the need for a fifth secondary clarifier, saving approximately $5 million in capital costs. Upgrading to high efficiency turbo blowers secured the city a $250,000 energy efficiency rebate while enhancements in UV and filtration technology limited the need for additional treatment trains.
The facility’s effluent was upgraded to Class A+, Arizona’s highest standard for reclaimed water. A new effluent pump station was built to deliver high-quality water where it’s needed most, directly supporting Peoria’s beneficial reuse program and its goal of increasing recharge capacity and reducing reliance on potable water supplies for irrigation.
“The Beardsley Road WRF 6 MGD Expansion is a great example of what can be accomplished through collaboration and innovation,” said City of Peoria Engineering Supervisor Chris Sterne. “Carollo Engineers and MGC Contractors delivered exceptional work under unprecedented conditions, successfully navigating early COVID-19 challenges including supply chain disruptions, long-lead procurement, and on-site safety constraints. By pairing capacity expansion with advanced treatment technologies and process improvements, the team not only increased system reliability and enabled Class A+ reclaimed water production but also reduced both initial capital costs and long-term operational expenses. This project reflects Peoria’s commitment to resilient, cost-effective infrastructure that supports continued growth and beneficial reuse.”
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Media Contact:
Cameron McWilliam
Senior Public Relations Manager // Carollo
[email protected]