Abstract

Abstract. Alba is a town of over 30 000 inhabitants located along the Tanaro River (Piedmont, northwestern Italy) and is famous for its wine and white truffles. Many important industries and companies are based in Alba, including the famous confectionery group Ferrero. The town suffered considerably from a flood that occurred on 5–6 November 1994. Forty-eight percent of the urban area was inundated, causing severe damage and killing nine people. After the flood, the Alba area was analysed in detail to determine the reasons for its vulnerability. Information on serious floods in this area since 1800 was gathered from official records, state technical office reports, unpublished documents in the municipal archives, and articles published in local and national newspapers. Maps, plans and aerial photographs (since 1954) were examined to reconstruct Alba's urban development over the last two centuries and the planform changes of the Tanaro River. The results were compared with the effects of the November 1994 flood, which was mapped from aerial photographs taken immediately after the flood, field surveys and eyewitness reports. The territory of Alba was subdivided into six categories: residential; public service; industrial, commercial and hotels; sports areas, utilities and standards (public gardens, parks, athletics grounds, private and public sport clubs); aggregate plants and dumps; and agriculture and riverine strip. The six categories were then grouped into three classes with different flooding-vulnerability levels according to various parameters. Using GIS, the three river corridors along the Tanaro identified by the Autorità di Bacino del Fiume Po were overlaid on the three classes to produce a final map of the risk areas. This study shows that the historic floods and their dynamics have not been duly considered in the land-use planning of Alba. The zones that were most heavily damaged in the 1994 flood were those that were frequently affected in the past and sites of more recent urbanisation. Despite recurrent severe flooding of the Tanaro River and its tributaries, areas along the riverbed and its paleochannels have been increasingly used for infrastructure and building (e.g., roads, a municipal dump, a prison, natural aggregate plants, a nomad camp), which has often interfered with the natural spread of the floodwaters. Since the 1994 flood, many remedial projects have been completed along the Tanaro and its tributaries, including levees, bank protection, concrete walls and floodway channels. In spite of these costly projects, some areas remain at high risk for flooding. The method used, which considered historical data, river corridors identified by hydraulic calculations, geomorphological aspects and land-use planning, can indicate with good accuracy flood-prone areas and in consequence to be an useful tool for the coherent planning of urban expansion and the mitigation of flood risk.

Highlights

  • Flood plains have consistently been attractive locations for urban development because of level ground, fertile soil, good sun exposure, ease of access and plentiful water

  • This study shows that the historic floods and their dynamics have not been duly considered in the land-use planning of Alba

  • To defend inhabited areas against the effects of the river’s natural processes, which often turn catastrophic because they are unforeseen, new fluvial areas must be adequately surveyed before they can be developed

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Summary

Introduction

Flood plains have consistently been attractive locations for urban development because of level ground, fertile soil, good sun exposure, ease of access and plentiful water. The Basin Authorities consider the hydrographic basins unitary systems for the purposes of land and subsoil conservation, water reclamation, water-resource management and environmental protection, regardless of administrative divisions This legislative innovation in the conservation sector is a result of the famous “Commissione De Marchi” that created the conditions for broad, integrated solutions to landmanagement problems on the basin scale after the severe flood that hit Florence in November 1966. Circular 7/LAP/1996 and Technical Note/1999 identify the guidelines as a regional standard for the implementation of the “check of hydraulic and hydrological compatibility with the future planning instruments with the conditions of instability...” Despite these efforts, recent field surveys have found new residential and commercial construction along watercourses, in mountain areas where municipal administrations manage the streams within their municipalities as they see fit. An improvement in land management and a decrease in errors in land-use planning can be anticipated

Meteorological conditions
The history of Alba: urban development and land transformation
5–6 Nov 1994
Land-use planning analysis
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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