LSLRCC Featured by ASLA Colorado as Drinking Water Infrastructure Planning Resource
Professional listing situates lead service line replacement within community infrastructure and public health planning.
Press Release
Chicago, Illinois – December 21, 2025
Environmental & Public Health International® (EPHI) announced that its Lead Service Line Replacement Cost Calculator® (LSLRCC) has been featured by the Colorado Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA Colorado) as a free, web-based infrastructure planning resource supporting drinking water system upgrades and community design coordination.
The listing identifies the LSLRCC as a planning resource supporting cost estimation for lead service line replacement, with applicability to Tribal, municipal, and professional planning contexts involving drinking water infrastructure and public works coordination.
Drinking Water Infrastructure in Community and Urban Planning
Landscape architects and planners regularly engage with drinking water infrastructure through streetscape projects, right-of-way improvements, redevelopment efforts, and coordination with public utilities. Lead service line replacement represents a foundational infrastructure activity that intersects with land use planning, urban design, and long-term community investment.
Lead service line replacement planning also intersects with climate adaptation objectives associated with infrastructure longevity, climate stressors, and system resilience.
Supporting Long-Term Infrastructure Resilience
The LSLRCC provides planning-level cost information that can be used alongside broader infrastructure, capital improvement, and resilience planning processes. By improving visibility into replacement scope and cost, the tool supports informed decision-making related to infrastructure sequencing, coordination with surface improvements, and lifecycle planning under evolving environmental and system stressors.
Cross-Disciplinary Infrastructure Planning
The ASLA Colorado feature reflects the relevance of lead service line replacement planning across professional disciplines, including landscape architecture, urban planning, engineering, and public health. Integration of drinking water infrastructure planning within these fields supports more coordinated, efficient, and durable community infrastructure outcomes.
“Lead service line replacement is a core infrastructure planning activity that intersects with community design, public health, and long-term system resilience,” said Anthony Ross, Founder of Environmental & Public Health International. “Tools that support coordination across planning and infrastructure disciplines help communities address legacy risks while preparing systems for future conditions.”

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Media Contact
Anthony Ross
Director, Environmental & Public Health International
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