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Urban flood resilience – A multi-criteria index to integrate flood resilience into urban planning

Bertilsson, Louise ; Wiklund, Karin ; de Moura Tebaldi, Isadora ; Rezende, Osvaldo Moura ; Veról, Aline Pires and Miguez, Marcelo Gomes (2019) In Journal of Hydrology 573. p.970-982
Abstract

Climate change and increasing urbanization pose huge challenges in managing urban planning for a sustainable future. Intense urbanization resulting in the so-called mega cites aggravates floods by increasing the amount of impermeable surfaces and modifying flow routes. Statistics show that flood disasters are one of the most significant in terms of damages and losses. Urbanization rates are increasing rapidly and it is important to learn how to live with floods by alleviating their consequences, in the present and future. This concern points to the resilience concept. By including the concept of resilience in flood risk analysis and decision-making, urban drainage design moves towards sustainable drainage systems. This study discusses... (More)

Climate change and increasing urbanization pose huge challenges in managing urban planning for a sustainable future. Intense urbanization resulting in the so-called mega cites aggravates floods by increasing the amount of impermeable surfaces and modifying flow routes. Statistics show that flood disasters are one of the most significant in terms of damages and losses. Urbanization rates are increasing rapidly and it is important to learn how to live with floods by alleviating their consequences, in the present and future. This concern points to the resilience concept. By including the concept of resilience in flood risk analysis and decision-making, urban drainage design moves towards sustainable drainage systems. This study discusses resilience in the flood risk contextWe considered three main drivers to define a quantitative measure of flood resilience: the capability of a drainage system to resist and provide its service continuously over time; the capability of an urban area to recover from flood losses; and the capability of urban systems to evacuate floodwaters and return to a functional state. Consequently, this paper describes how flood resilience can be modeled and spatialized by a multi-criteria index called Spatialized Urban Flood Resilience Index (S-FRESI). The S-FRESI composition (according to the resilience definition adopted) combines: the hazard characteristics and the system exposure and susceptibility, to represent flood resistance mapped over time; the ability for material recovery from losses caused by inundation, considering the income variable; and the functional capacity of the drainage system, represented by the flood duration. S-FRESI can be used to measure and visualize the changes in flood resilience attained by different flood control measures, as well as in future scenarios of population growth, uncontrolled urbanization or climate change. The index was tested with coherent and consistent results in the Dona Eugênia river catchment in Rio de Janeiro. Four different scenarios were formulated: (1) the current situation; (2) the current situation considering the implementation of sustainable flood control measures; (3) a future situation with the same infrastructure as today; and (4) a future situation with the considered flood control measures.

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author
; ; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Flood resilience, Flood risk, Spatialized Urban Flood Resilience Index S-FRESI, Sustainable urban drainage, Urban development, Urban floods
in
Journal of Hydrology
volume
573
pages
970 - 982
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85049106726
ISSN
0022-1694
DOI
10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.06.052
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
cfa57e17-1bc8-479d-bcf4-20f8c040fa9e
date added to LUP
2018-07-09 13:57:02
date last changed
2022-06-30 12:31:29
@article{cfa57e17-1bc8-479d-bcf4-20f8c040fa9e,
  abstract     = {{<p>Climate change and increasing urbanization pose huge challenges in managing urban planning for a sustainable future. Intense urbanization resulting in the so-called mega cites aggravates floods by increasing the amount of impermeable surfaces and modifying flow routes. Statistics show that flood disasters are one of the most significant in terms of damages and losses. Urbanization rates are increasing rapidly and it is important to learn how to live with floods by alleviating their consequences, in the present and future. This concern points to the resilience concept. By including the concept of resilience in flood risk analysis and decision-making, urban drainage design moves towards sustainable drainage systems. This study discusses resilience in the flood risk contextWe considered three main drivers to define a quantitative measure of flood resilience: the capability of a drainage system to resist and provide its service continuously over time; the capability of an urban area to recover from flood losses; and the capability of urban systems to evacuate floodwaters and return to a functional state. Consequently, this paper describes how flood resilience can be modeled and spatialized by a multi-criteria index called Spatialized Urban Flood Resilience Index (S-FRESI). The S-FRESI composition (according to the resilience definition adopted) combines: the hazard characteristics and the system exposure and susceptibility, to represent flood resistance mapped over time; the ability for material recovery from losses caused by inundation, considering the income variable; and the functional capacity of the drainage system, represented by the flood duration. S-FRESI can be used to measure and visualize the changes in flood resilience attained by different flood control measures, as well as in future scenarios of population growth, uncontrolled urbanization or climate change. The index was tested with coherent and consistent results in the Dona Eugênia river catchment in Rio de Janeiro. Four different scenarios were formulated: (1) the current situation; (2) the current situation considering the implementation of sustainable flood control measures; (3) a future situation with the same infrastructure as today; and (4) a future situation with the considered flood control measures.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bertilsson, Louise and Wiklund, Karin and de Moura Tebaldi, Isadora and Rezende, Osvaldo Moura and Veról, Aline Pires and Miguez, Marcelo Gomes}},
  issn         = {{0022-1694}},
  keywords     = {{Flood resilience; Flood risk; Spatialized Urban Flood Resilience Index S-FRESI; Sustainable urban drainage; Urban development; Urban floods}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{970--982}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of Hydrology}},
  title        = {{Urban flood resilience – A multi-criteria index to integrate flood resilience into urban planning}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.06.052}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.06.052}},
  volume       = {{573}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}