4.6 Article

Flood exposure analysis of road infrastructure - Comparison of different methods at national level

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101548

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Flood exposure; Road network; Road area; Edge betweenness centrality; Spatial comparison; Spatial network analysis

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Assessing the flood exposure of infrastructure is crucial for sustainable flood risk management. We propose to define road exposure to floods as any road segment/element located within a flood hazard zone. On the example of Switzerland, we develop and compare three methods to assess the flood exposure of the road infrastructure: absolute road area potentially flooded (method A), relative road area potentially flooded (method B), and a network-based approach using the edge betweenness centrality index (method C). The results are aggregated and ranked in grid cells of 2 km by 2 km for comparison. The ranks are directly proportional to exposure levels. The results present distinct spatial patterns; grid cells with higher values in method A indicate where more road surfaces are in a flood hazard zone (urban or high road density areas in flood plains), while method B highlights where most of the road surface is in flood hazard zones of predominantly mountainous areas of Switzerland. Higher values in method C present areas where the most-connected road links within a network are exposed to floods. Most of the grid cells that have higher values in method B than in method C indicate isolated mountain valleys that can be accessed only by a single mad exposed to floods. The study demonstrates the importance of an appropriate choice of methods in flood exposure analysis. As exposure analysis is a key step in flood risk assessment, the presented results provide information essential for decision making in disaster risk reduction.

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