Abstract

We survey the network properties and response to damage sustained of road networks of cities worldwide, using OpenStreetMap (OSM) data. We find that our primary damage response variable , which is the average shortest time needed to reach all nodes in a road network (which stand in for locations within a metropolitan area) from an initial node (which stands in for the location of a center for disaster relief operations), is strongly linearly–correlated with pd, the fraction of the road network segments damaged. We find that this result, previously reported for a city’s road network as opposed to grid and scale-free idealizations, is widely present across the road networks we have examined regardless of location. Furthermore, we identify three families of road networks according to their damage response, forming a typology by which we can classify city road networks. Using this typology, we identify the family of road networks which may be of most concern from a humanitarian standpoint. We also find that, of the properties of the road networks we examined, the average shortest path length, 〈lmin〉 and the average node degree, 〈k〉, proxies for city road network size and complexity respectively, are very significantly–correlated with damage susceptibility. In addition to forming a damage response typology by which city road networks could be classified, we consider five cities in detail, looking at risks and previous disaster events. Our results offer a generalizable framework in evaluating the feasibility of coursing relief efforts within disaster–affected areas using land–based transportation methods. They also provide, albeit in retrospect, a glimpse of the time difficulties which occurred, and the stakes of life involved in the humanitarian crisis which developed in the Kathmandu area due to the earthquakes of April and May 2015.

Highlights

  • The death toll and property losses from natural disasters number in the thousands of lives and millions in US dollars annually

  • We reported that the time needed to reach lower percentages of the road network (q below 80% to 90%) has a weaker dependence on pd, in contrast to when q = 100, or equivalently, when the most inaccessible locations are needed to be served. With this survey of two metropolitan road network datasets, we further find that these two Typology, network features and damage response in worldwide urban road systems insights are not unique to the city road network previously studied (Tacloban City in the Philippines, which was hit by Typhoon Haiyan in November 2013), but is found in others worldwide

  • We show that a linear damage response behavior of a road network is widespread, and may be universal to city road networks

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Summary

Introduction

The death toll and property losses from natural disasters number in the thousands of lives and millions in US dollars annually. In 2018 alone, there were 315 natural disasters reported by the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED), affecting 68.5 million people, causing 11,804 deaths, and US$ 132 billion in economic losses. In this study are available from Brookings Institution reports In this study are available from Brookings Institution reports (https://www.brookings.edu/ research/global-metro-monitor/ and https://www. brookings.edu/research/global-metro-monitor2018/)

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