Abstract

This article describes a new method of urban pluvial flood modeling by coupling the 1D storm water management model (SWMM) and the 2D flood inundation model (ECNU Flood-Urban). The SWMM modeling results (the overflow of the manholes) are used as the input boundary condition of the ECNU Flood-Urban model to simulate the rainfall–runoff processes in an urban environment. The analysis is applied to the central business district of East Nanjing Road in downtown Shanghai, considering 5-, 10-, 20-, 50-, and 100-year return period rainfall scenarios. The results show that node overflow, water depth, and inundation area increase proportionately with the growing return periods. Water depths are mostly predicted to be shallow and surface flows generally occur in the urban road network due to its low-lying nature. The simulation result of the coupled model proves to be reliable and suggests that urban surface water flooding could be accurately simulated by using this methodology. Adaptation measures (upgrading of the urban drainage system) can then be targeted at specific locations with significant overflow and flooding.

Highlights

  • Urban pluvial flooding is attracting growing public concern and research focus worldwide

  • This article describes a new method of urban pluvial flood modeling by coupling the 1D storm water management model (SWMM) and the 2D flood inundation model (ECNU Flood-Urban)

  • We developed a SWMM link to define the location of manhole inflow in the ECNU Flood-Urban model

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Urban pluvial flooding is attracting growing public concern and research focus worldwide. There is a growing consensus that climate change will result in more extreme precipitation events (IPCC 2012, 2013; Zhang, Gu et al 2018). The existing drainage network systems in most cities are outdated and rapid urbanization has significantly outpaced the construction of urban infrastructure, making cities more vulnerable to pluvial flooding. These combined factors result in an increase in the frequency and severity of urban pluvial flooding

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call