Winter Haven’s ‘water budget’ a blueprint for sustainable growth

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Project Name
Integrated/One Water Master Plan
Location
Winter Haven, Florida
Client
City of Winter Haven

In the heart of Florida, some 50 miles from Tampa and Orlando, Winter Haven is a water wonderland befitting its many monikers: the Inland Coastal Playground and the Water Ski Capital of the World. Even the Chain of Lakes City, a nod to 50 lakes linked by canals within or adjacent to the city limits.

It’s also home to the headwaters of the Peace River and its watershed, the primary contributor to the Charlotte Harbor Estuary and the second largest watershed on Florida’s coastline. The city’s primary water source — the Floridan aquifer system — is replenished in the area.

While synonymous with water and abundant rainfall, mostly in the summer, Winter Haven faces a paradox: A future shadowed by water scarcity as rampant growth demands more water resources and infrastructure continues to age.

Now by adopting what could be a model for other cities facing water sustainability pressures, Winter Haven is on the offensive with a regionally minded, multi-decade master plan developed by Black & Veatch.

The mission: controlling its water future

The essence of the plan: Put the city on a “water budget” — much like handling a bank account — that balances water deposits (recharge) and withdrawals (consumption) to avoid the deficits impacting Winter Haven’s water availability. It’s a holistic, innovative and crucially quantifiable approach meant to help the city sustain the resilience of its water supply, ecosystem health and economic vitality.

That concept is rooted in the “One Water” premise that all forms of water — from drinking water to wastewater, stormwater, reclaimed water, indirect and direct potable reuse, and groundwater — are a singular, defragmented resource to be managed sustainably.

Such a push comes amid far broader concerns about water supplies. Warning that the planet is entering an era of global “water bankruptcy,” a United Nations research agency reported in January 2026 that the Earth's water repositories — aquifers, rivers, lakes and the like — are being depleted faster than they can be restored. Nearly three-quarters of the global population is in countries classified as water insecure, often critically.

"These are not simply signs of stress or episodes of crisis," the report pressed. "They are symptoms of systems that have overspent their hydrological budget and eroded the natural capital that once made recovery possible, with knock-on effects for food prices, employment, migration and geopolitical stability."

Winter Haven’s quest for answers

Winter Haven leaders have recognized for decades that their water supply, though seemingly secure, was at risk. This recognition led to the city commissioning a sustainable water resource management plan that focused on watershed matters in 2010.

The Black & Veatch water budget strategy broadens that, pulling in the utility side of the quandary and making outcomes more definitive.

The reasons were abundant. The city’s traditional reliance on groundwater — once plentiful and inexpensive — is turning unsustainable. Population growth, high per-capita water uses and competing demands from agriculture and industry are driving up consumption. Nearly half of the city’s water is being used for irrigation — common across Florida, but increasingly problematic as the region’s natural systems struggle to keep pace.

Rather than wait for a crisis, Winter Haven is choosing to act by adopting a comprehensive, actionable One Water plan that aims to integrate utility system upgrades with watershed restoration, which in turn promotes water resilience, environmental health and economic stability."

one water master plan

The water budget: simple, powerful tool

Central to Winter Haven’s strategy is the water budget concept with a straightforward equation: Inputs minus outputs equals change in storage. For a watershed, this means tracking rainfall, evaporation, runoff, groundwater recharge and water use across all sectors.

Scale and simplicity made the approach novel. Instead of relying solely on complex groundwater models, the team drew a line around the entire watershed, accounting for every drop that entered or left. They modeled scenarios over 20 to 35 years down the road, revealing trends and deficits that otherwise would have gone unnoticed.

The results were eye-opening: The watershed’s ability to store water during wet seasons had been severely compromised by decades of ditching, draining and development. Treated wastewater, once discarded, now is recognized as a valuable resource to be recycled and reused.

Two-pronged solutions: infrastructure, restoration

While demonstrating the value of integrated planning and responsible growth management, the plan that has emerged is both ambitious and pragmatic.

On the utility side, the city is in the early planning stages of consolidating its two aging wastewater treatment plants into a single, modern facility capable of treating water to high standards while supporting reuse.

Another important project will be the restoration of 15 watershed areas. While only one parcel of land has been purchased as of early 2026, the city will explore how to acquire the remaining identified parcels to work toward rebuilding the natural storage capacity lost over generations.

One flagship initiative from the One Water blueprint is the BRADCO farms project involving acquiring hundreds of acres of legacy agricultural land and transforming it into a nature park with wetlands that would store water and recharge the aquifer. While still is in the early planning stages, that project ultimately will align with watershed restoration, aquifer recharge, natural recreation and many other benefits laid out in the One Water blueprint.

By integrating green infrastructure, natural system restoration, reclaimed water, community engagement and strategic investments, Winter Haven is securing a resilient and vibrant water future while enhancing environmental health and economic opportunity."

winter haven project

As implementation continues, the city remains committed to refining its plan, engaging stakeholders and adapting to new challenges. The blueprint will be measured not just in completed projects but in the resilience and vitality of a community that chose to invest in its future — every drop of it.

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