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Mapping Flood Risk Uncertainty Zones in Support of Urban Resilience Planning
Author(s) -
S. Anders Brandt,
Nancy Joy Lim,
Johan Colding,
Stephan Barthel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
urban planning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2183-7635
DOI - 10.17645/up.v6i3.4073
Subject(s) - flood myth , flooding (psychology) , urbanization , urban planning , resilience (materials science) , environmental planning , environmental resource management , function (biology) , flood mitigation , climate change , psychological resilience , computer science , geography , environmental science , risk analysis (engineering) , civil engineering , business , engineering , psychology , physics , archaeology , evolutionary biology , biology , economic growth , economics , psychotherapist , thermodynamics , ecology
River flooding and urbanization are processes of different character that take place worldwide. As the latter tends to make the consequences of the former worse, together with the uncertainties related to future climate change and flood-risk modeling, there is a need to both use existing tools and develop new ones that help the management and planning of urban environments. In this article a prototype tool, based on estimated maximum land cover roughness variation, the slope of the ground, and the quality of the used digital elevation models, and that can produce flood ‘uncertainty zones’ of varying width around modeled flood boundaries, is presented. The concept of uncertainty, which urban planners often fail to consider in the spatial planning process, changes from something very difficult into an advantage in this way. Not only may these uncertainties be easier to understand by the urban planners, but the uncertainties may also function as a communication tool between the planners and other stakeholders. Because flood risk is something that urban planners always need to consider, these uncertainty zones can function both as buffer areas against floods, and as blue-green designs of significant importance for a variety of ecosystem services. As the Earth is warming and the world is urbanizing at rates and scales unprecedented in history, we believe that new tools for urban resilience planning are not only urgently needed, but also will have a positive impact on urban planning.

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