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Urban Floods: Linking the Overloading of a Storm Water Sewer System to Precipitation Parameters

Ivan Vorobevskii, Firas Al Janabi, Fabian Schneebeck, Jose Bellera, Peter Krebs

2020Hydrology32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The lack and inefficiency of urban drainage systems, as well as extreme precipitation, can lead to system overloading and, therefore, an urban pluvial flood. The study brings insights into this phenomenon from the perspective of the statistical relationship between precipitation and flooding parameters. The paper investigates the possibility of predicting sewer overloading based on the characteristics of the upcoming rain event using the Storm Water Management Model (SWMM) and statistical methods. Additionally, it examines the influence of precipitation resolution on the model sensitivity regarding floods. The study is set in a small urban catchment in Dresden (Germany) with a separated stormwater sewer system (SWSS). The flood-event-based calibrated model runs with observed and designed heavy rain events of various sums, durations, and intensities. Afterward, the analysis focuses on precipitation and model overloading parameters (total flood volume, maximum flooding time and flow rate, and maximum nodal water depth) with pairwise correlation and multi-linear regression (MLR). The results indicate that it is possible to define a certain threshold (or range) for a few precipitation characteristics, which could lead to an urban flood, and fitting MLR can noticeably improve the predictability of the SWSS overloading parameters. The study concludes that design and observed rain events should be considered separately and that the resolution of the precipitation data (1/5/10 min) does not play a significant role in SWSS overloading.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental sciencePrecipitationHydrology (agriculture)Flash floodFlood mythStormwaterDrainageFlooding (psychology)StormMeteorologySurface runoffGeologyGeographyGeotechnical engineeringEcologyPsychotherapistBiologyArchaeologyPsychologyUrban Stormwater Management SolutionsFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrology and Watershed Management Studies