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Highly Resolved Rainfall-Runoff Simulation of Retrofitted Green Stormwater Infrastructure at the Micro-Watershed Scale

Sami Towsif Khan, José Fernando Chapa Zumba, Jochen Hack*

*Korrespondierende*r Autor*in für diese Arbeit

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Abstract

Green Stormwater Infrastructure (GSI), a sustainable engineering design approach for managing urban stormwater runoff, has long been recommended as an alternative to conventional conveyance-based stormwater management strategies to mitigate the adverse impact of sprawling urbanization. Hydrological and hydraulic simulations of small-scale GSI measures in densely urbanized micro watersheds require high-resolution spatial databases of urban land use, stormwater structures, and topography. This study presents a highly resolved Storm Water Management Model developed under considerable spatial data constraints. It evaluates the cumulative effect of the implementation of dispersed, retrofitted, small-scale GSI measures in a heavily urbanized micro watershed of Costa Rica. Our methodology includes a high-resolution digital elevation model based on Google Earth information, the accuracy of which was sufficient to determine flow patterns and slopes, as well as to approximate the underground stormwater structures. The model produced satisfactory results in event-based calibration and validation, which ensured the reliability of the data collection procedure. Simulating the implementation of GSI shows that dispersed, retrofitted, small-scale measures could significantly reduce impermeable surface runoff (peak runoff reduction up to 40%) during frequent, less intense storm events and delay peak surface runoff by 5-10 min. The presented approach can benefit stormwater practitioners and modelers conducting small scale hydrological simulation under spatial data constraint.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer0339
FachzeitschriftLand
Jahrgang9
Ausgabenummer9
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 22 Sept. 2020
Extern publiziertJa

UN-Ziele für nachhaltige Entwicklung (SDGs)

2015 einigten sich die UN-Mitgliedstaaten auf 17 globale Ziele für nachhaltige Entwicklung (Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs) zur Beendigung von Armut, zum Schutz des Planeten und zur Förderung des allgemeinen Wohlstands. Hiermit leisten wir einen Beitrag zu folgendem/n Ziel(en) für nachhaltige Entwicklung (SDGs):

  1. SDG 11 - Nachhaltige Städte und Gemeinschaften
    SDG 11 Nachhaltige Städte und Gemeinschaften
  2. SDG 15 - Lebensraum Land
    SDG 15 Lebensraum Land

ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete

  • Globaler Wandel
  • Ökologie
  • Natur- und Landschaftsschutz

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