Abstract

In 2009, South Korea started a large multi-purpose water project on its four major rivers. The main purposes of the Four Major Rivers Restoration Project (FMRRP), which are directly related to water itself, were: (1) securing water resources to combat water scarcity; (2) reducing flood risks by riverbed dredging and reinforcing levees; and (3) restoring the river's environmental functions. Despite socio-environmental opposition, the project was completed in 2011. This article reviews the sedimentation issues raised during and after the FMRRP regarding technological developments and the lessons learned from the project. A total of five sedimentation issues raised directly from the project are reviewed in this article: (1) riverbed dredging and sediment redeposition; (2) tributary headcut; (3) riverbed scour downstream of the movable weir structures; (4) sedimentation management schemes; and (5) a near-prototype river experiment facility. Each issue is addressed by identifying and analyzing field data, developing new numerical models, and testing at a large-scale experiment facility. From this project, we have found that a comprehensive numerical technique is required to predict the sediment issues as mentioned above in a watershed-scale riverwork.

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