Improving the Characterization of Urban Flash Floods through Application
of Local Knowledge
Abstract
Despite recent advances in sensors, hydro-meteorological data remain
scarce in urban watersheds. In the current, reactive approach to
stormwater management, whether or not an urban flood event is
documented, as well as where and how it actually occurred, is highly
dependent on the level of monitoring. Even though there are many methods
for observing flooding extent and predicting flooding vulnerability,
issues with data availability and accuracy persist at the local level.
Urban watersheds are spatially and temporally complex and flash floods,
while of particular interest and importance to both hydrologists and
communities, are hard to characterize, given that they are rare,
spatially localized, short-lived, and often occur in locations without
formal monitoring. On the other hand, identifying vulnerable areas in a
large city using hydraulic/hydrological modeling would be very
difficult, either because models have parameters that need to be
calibrated against mostly non-existent data (in the case of conceptual
models), or else we do not know all of the actual physical processes at
work, or how to quantify them (in the case of physically-based models).
Community-based monitoring activities can support the characterization
of urban watersheds, as well as stormwater management, because they
provide valuable spatial and temporal knowledge about the behavior of
water flow and other related issues at a local level. An urban watershed
study was conducted to demonstrate the value of community-based
observations for understanding and characterizing urban pluvial flash
flooding, by addressing the following questions: (i) How can communities
feasibly monitor their local watershed using low-cost, straightforward
approaches? (ii) How can local knowledge help us to better define and
characterize urban pluvial flooding vulnerability? (iii) Are
community-based data reliable and meaningful to urban watershed
management and the decision-making process? To pursue these questions,
participatory research was applied in a low-resourced community in the
City of PaternĂ², in Sicily, Italy. We collected as unbiased as possible
information about flash flooding events through 300 surveys. The
locally-gathered data were compared to the results of advanced
hydrodynamic models on smaller scales.