Abstract

Protecting against riverbank erosion along the world’s largest rivers is challenging. The Bangladesh Delta, bisected by the Brahmaputra River (also called the Jamuna River), is rife with complexity. Here, an emerging middle-income country with the world’s highest population density coexists with the world’s most unpredictable and largest braided, sand-bed river. Bangladesh has struggled over decades to protect against the onslaught of a continuously widening river corridor. Many of the principles implemented successfully in other parts of the world failed in Bangladesh. To this end, Bangladesh embarked on intensive knowledge-based developments and piloted new technologies. After two decades, successful, sustainable, low-cost riverbank protection technology was developed, suitable for the challenging river conditions. It was necessary to accept that no construction is permanent in this morphologically dynamic environment. What was initially born out of fund shortages became a cost-effective, systematic and adaptive approach to riverbank protection using improved knowledge, new materials, and new techniques, in the form of geobag revetments. This article provides an overview of the challenges faced when attempting to stabilize the riverbanks of the mighty rivers of Bangladesh. An overview of the construction of the major bridge crossings as well as riverbank protection schemes is detailed. Finally, a summary of lessons learned concludes the impressive progress made.

Highlights

  • The development of river training works and riverbank protection in Bangladesh is closely linked to how the fast-growing and developing population attempts to deal with one of the most hazard-prone deltaic landscapes on earth

  • As the risk of failure is always present in the mighty rivers of Bangladesh, design techniques have traditionally steered towards structures that are immune from local failures and need little or no maintenance

  • Bangladesh has contributed to the development of low-cost riverbank protection for much less valued agricultural lands

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Summary

Introduction

The Ganges and Brahmaputra (named the Jamuna in Bangladesh) are among the ten largest rivers of the world [2]. Both rivers join in Bangladesh to form the Padma River (Figure 1). With an annual average discharge of 30,000 m3 /s, the Padma is the third largest river in the world (in terms of discharge), only surpassed by the Congo and Amazon. These immense rivers flow through intensively used land; Bangladesh leads the world in. The population population density of area states more intensively than 1100 persons/km

In density of both
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Shimla has broken offoff and thethe
Elements of aofbroad design
Knowledge-Based Development Drives Change
Revetments
Revetments Are Superior to Spurs
Design and construction phase
Learning by Doing—A Flexible Design Approach for Dynamic Rivers
The World of Aprons—A Fine Line between Success and Failure
Geotechnical
Findings
Summary
Full Text
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