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Influence of the Urban Block Structure on the Flow Pattern Along a Flooded Street

Author(s): Miguel Angel Mejia Morales, Sebastien Proust, Emmanuel Mignot, Andre Paquier

Linked Author(s): Miguel Angel Mejia Morales, Sébastien Proust, André Paquier

Keywords: Physical model; Urban flood; Laboratory experiment; Lateral flow exchanges;

Abstract: The study of flooding in urban environments has some complexity, mainly due to the presence of buildings, among others (e.g., vehicles, street furniture, drainage system, underground transportation system). These buildings and their facilities are grouped into blocks that are normally assumed to be impervious in urban flood studies. However, water enters these blocks through different openings such as e.g., windows, doors, gates, fences, and these lateral flow exchanges between streets and blocks can locally alter the flow pattern. In order to study these exchange processes and their influence on both flow depth and velocity in the streets during flood events, experiments were conducted on a devoted physical model termed MURI (Urban Model for the study of Inundation Risk), at Irstea, Lyon-Villeurbanne, France. The present study focused on two geometric configurations, a straight street flanked by two lateral cavities, and a straight street flanked by one-side opening. These flows were also compared to a quasi-uniform flow (reference flow without openings). The experiments have shown that a detailed description of the building blocks is required if flow depths and velocities (flood hazard) has to be locally estimated.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3850/38WC092019-1487

Year: 2019

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