Pluvial Flooding in European Cities—A Continental Approach to Urban Flood Modelling
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- the quality of the available DEMs, especially in forested regions and urban areas where the satellite information might correspond to the top of the canopy/building instead of the elevation of the ground;
- the quality of the precipitation data, which is very variable in time and place, and the fact that different types of rainfall inputs (gauge, radar, satellite or reanalysis) results in different orders of magnitude in terms of monetary loss from flooding results;
- the lack of data to calibrate hydrological models, especially in ungauged catchments.
2. Data
- EU-DEM [8]—a Digital Elevation Model over Europe “produced using Copernicus data and information funded by the European Union”. The EU-DEM is a hybrid product based on SRTM and ASTER GDEM data with 25-m resolution (projection 3035: EU-DEM-3035).
- Urban Morphological zones 2000 [10] defined as “set of urban areas laying less than 200 m apart”. This European Environment Agency (EEA) dataset was built based on the urban land cover classes of the CORINE Land Cover dataset. This data was necessary to define the “urban area” inside each city since the definition of “city” in the urban audit dataset can include non-urban areas, and sometimes even estuaries (see Figure S2 in Supplementary Materials for some examples).
- E-obs [11], an European daily gridded data set for precipitation and maximum and mean surface temperature at a 0.25 degree resolution for the period 1950–2013. E-obs is based on observations from 2316 stations, although the number changes over time showing a sharp rise in the number of gauges from 1950 to 1960 and a dip in 1976 (for stations with less than 20% missing monthly data). However, the spatial coverage throughout Europe is every uneven, with the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands and Switzerland having a much higher gauge density.
- Several observed sub-daily rainfall datasets were combined:
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- A total of 38 European gauges with time-series of annual maximum hourly rainfall, provided by Dr Panos Panagos, from the Joint Research Centre, that were collected under the auspices of the REDES project [12].
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- Some 192 UK gauges with time-series of annual maximum hourly rainfall (provided by Dr. Stephen Blenkinsop from Newcastle University) that were collected under the auspices of the CONVEX project [13]. These data were collected from three sources: the UK Met Office Integrated Data Archive System (MIDAS), the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) and the UK Environment Agency (EA). Not all these gauges were used, since that would mean the density of gauges used in the UK would be well above the density of gauges in the rest of Europe, therefore affecting the results of the analyses.
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- One gauge (Catraia) with hourly time-series for the South of Portugal downloaded from the Portuguese National Water Resources Information System (http://snirh.pt/).
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- IDF curves were collated for:
3. Methods
3.1. Historical Intense Hourly Rainfall
3.2. Urban Hydrodynamic Model
4. Results and Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Guerreiro, S.B.; Glenis, V.; Dawson, R.J.; Kilsby, C. Pluvial Flooding in European Cities—A Continental Approach to Urban Flood Modelling. Water 2017, 9, 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9040296
Guerreiro SB, Glenis V, Dawson RJ, Kilsby C. Pluvial Flooding in European Cities—A Continental Approach to Urban Flood Modelling. Water. 2017; 9(4):296. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9040296
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuerreiro, Selma B., Vassilis Glenis, Richard J. Dawson, and Chris Kilsby. 2017. "Pluvial Flooding in European Cities—A Continental Approach to Urban Flood Modelling" Water 9, no. 4: 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9040296
APA StyleGuerreiro, S. B., Glenis, V., Dawson, R. J., & Kilsby, C. (2017). Pluvial Flooding in European Cities—A Continental Approach to Urban Flood Modelling. Water, 9(4), 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9040296