New Water Treatment Plant

  • Midwest provided construction administration for a new 6.0 MGD water treatment plant (WTP) serving over 12,000 people across 20 entities near Fredonia, Kansas. The new facility replaced an aging, flood-prone plant that faced operational challenges, including outdated equipment, high turbidity levels, and insufficient storage and distribution capacity.

    Under an agreement with PWWSD No. 23, Danny oversaw the construction, offering daily observation, materials testing, documentation, and project management support. The upgraded WTP, with over 1,000 horsepower of pumps, three miles of large-diameter waterlines, and over a million gallons of storage, now meets current and future demands, including potential system expansions.

New Water Treatment Plant

  • Midwest provided construction administration for a new 6.0 MGD water treatment plant (WTP) serving over 12,000 people across 20 entities near Fredonia, Kansas. The new facility replaced an aging, flood-prone plant that faced operational challenges, including outdated equipment, high turbidity levels, and insufficient storage and distribution capacity.

    Under an agreement with PWWSD No. 23, Danny oversaw the construction, offering daily observation, materials testing, documentation, and project management support. The upgraded WTP, with over 1,000 horsepower of pumps, three miles of large-diameter waterlines, and over a million gallons of storage, now meets current and future demands, including potential system expansions.

New Water Treatment Plant

  • Midwest provided construction administration for a new 6.0 MGD water treatment plant (WTP) serving over 12,000 people across 20 entities near Fredonia, Kansas. The new facility replaced an aging, flood-prone plant that faced operational challenges, including outdated equipment, high turbidity levels, and insufficient storage and distribution capacity.

    Under an agreement with PWWSD No. 23, Danny oversaw the construction, offering daily observation, materials testing, documentation, and project management support. The upgraded WTP, with over 1,000 horsepower of pumps, three miles of large-diameter waterlines, and over a million gallons of storage, now meets current and future demands, including potential system expansions.

Water Treatment Plant Improvements

  • Rural Water District #2
    Allen County, KS


    Midwest Engineering Group provided consulting services to Rural Water District No. 2 in Miami County, Kansas, to evaluate and plan comprehensive upgrades to its water treatment plant (WTP). What began as a project to replace the aging above-ground Clearwell expanded into a $38 million, multi-phase improvement plan addressing discharge flow rates, treatment processes, and storage needs. Phase I ($5M) is complete, and construction on Phase II ($16M) is underway, with completion expected in 2025. These upgrades will expand the WTP’s capacity from its current 6.0 MGD—originally built in 1984 and expanded in 1998—to 12 MGD to meet increasing demand. The existing treatment process includes high-rate clarification, a contact basin, and filtration, and Phase III planning is under consideration.

    RWD No. 2 supplies treated water across 300 square miles in northern Miami County and neighboring areas, serving multiple cities and rural water districts. The distribution system is made up of 2-inch to 30-inch ductile iron and PVC piping, with six high service pumps at the treatment plant providing a firm pumping capacity of 6 MGD.

Water Treatment Plant Improvements

  • Midwest Engineering Group provided consulting services to Rural Water District No. 2 in Miami County, Kansas, to evaluate and plan comprehensive upgrades to its water treatment plant (WTP). What began as a project to replace the aging above-ground Clearwell expanded into a $38 million, multi-phase improvement plan addressing discharge flow rates, treatment processes, and storage needs. Phase I ($5M) is complete, and construction on Phase II ($16M) is underway, with completion expected in 2025. These upgrades will expand the WTP’s capacity from its current 6.0 MGD—originally built in 1984 and expanded in 1998—to 12 MGD to meet increasing demand. The existing treatment process includes high-rate clarification, a contact basin, and filtration, and Phase III planning is under consideration.

    RWD No. 2 supplies treated water across 300 square miles in northern Miami County and neighboring areas, serving multiple cities and rural water districts. The distribution system is made up of 2-inch to 30-inch ductile iron and PVC piping, with six high service pumps at the treatment plant providing a firm pumping capacity of 6 MGD.

Water Treatment Plant Improvements

  • Midwest Engineering Group provided consulting services to Rural Water District No. 2 in Miami County, Kansas, to evaluate and plan comprehensive upgrades to its water treatment plant (WTP). What began as a project to replace the aging above-ground Clearwell expanded into a $38 million, multi-phase improvement plan addressing discharge flow rates, treatment processes, and storage needs. Phase I ($5M) is complete, and construction on Phase II ($16M) is underway, with completion expected in 2025. These upgrades will expand the WTP’s capacity from its current 6.0 MGD—originally built in 1984 and expanded in 1998—to 12 MGD to meet increasing demand. The existing treatment process includes high-rate clarification, a contact basin, and filtration, and Phase III planning is under consideration.

    RWD No. 2 supplies treated water across 300 square miles in northern Miami County and neighboring areas, serving multiple cities and rural water districts. The distribution system is made up of 2-inch to 30-inch ductile iron and PVC piping, with six high service pumps at the treatment plant providing a firm pumping capacity of 6 MGD.

Multiple Waterline Improvement Projects

  • Allen County Rural Water District #8
    Iola, KS

    Midwest Engineering provided consulting services to Allen RWD8 for two waterline improvement projects aimed at addressing low water pressure. The first project involved upgrading approximately 5 miles of 3” waterline to 6” CL200 PVC main and 0.5 miles to 2” CL200 PVC. Midwest handled design plans, permitting with KDHE, and construction phase services including contract management, inspections, pay estimates, and as-built documentation.

    The second project upgraded 3.5 miles of 2.5” waterline to 6” PVC and included installation of tracer wire, gate valves, fire hydrants, clean-outs, and various utility crossings. Midwest performed similar duties as in the first project and provided construction observation services for the County throughout the process.

Multiple Waterline Improvement Projects


  • Midwest Engineering provided consulting services to Allen RWD8 for two waterline improvement projects aimed at addressing low water pressure. The first project involved upgrading approximately 5 miles of 3” waterline to 6” CL200 PVC main and 0.5 miles to 2” CL200 PVC. Midwest handled design plans, permitting with KDHE, and construction phase services including contract management, inspections, pay estimates, and as-built documentation.

    The second project upgraded 3.5 miles of 2.5” waterline to 6” PVC and included installation of tracer wire, gate valves, fire hydrants, clean-outs, and various utility crossings. Midwest performed similar duties as in the first project and provided construction observation services for the County throughout the process.

Multiple Waterline Improvement Projects

  • Midwest Engineering provided consulting services to Allen RWD8 for two waterline improvement projects aimed at addressing low water pressure. The first project involved upgrading approximately 5 miles of 3” waterline to 6” CL200 PVC main and 0.5 miles to 2” CL200 PVC. Midwest handled design plans, permitting with KDHE, and construction phase services including contract management, inspections, pay estimates, and as-built documentation.

    The second project upgraded 3.5 miles of 2.5” waterline to 6” PVC and included installation of tracer wire, gate valves, fire hydrants, clean-outs, and various utility crossings. Midwest performed similar duties as in the first project and provided construction observation services for the County throughout the process.

Public Wholesale Water Supply

District No. 23 (PWWSD No. 23)
New Water Treatment Plant
Design and Construction Administration