4.8 Article

Making waves: Uses of real-time, hyperlocal flood sensor data for emergency management, resiliency planning, and flood impact mitigation

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 220, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118648

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Funding

  1. Connected Cities for Smart Mobility towards Accessible and Resilient Transportation (C2SMART) University Center ( U.S. Department of Transportation) [69A3351747124]
  2. New York State Empire State Devel-opment Smart Cities Initiative
  3. NYU Marron Institute of Urban Management
  4. CUNY Office of Research

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This article highlights the significance of low-cost water level sensors in measuring flood profiles, providing real-time hyperlocal flood data for various stakeholders, such as municipal agencies, community members, and researchers.
Flooding is expected to increase due to intensification of extreme precipitation events, sea-level rise, and urbanization. Low-cost water level sensors have the ability to fill a critical data gap on the presence, depth, and duration of street-level floods by measuring flood profiles (i.e., flood stage hydrographs) in real-time with a time interval on the order of minutes. Hyperlocal flood data collected by low-cost sensors have many use cases for a variety of stakeholders including municipal agencies, community members, and researchers. Here we outline examples of potential uses of flood sensor data before, during, and after flood events, based on dialog with stakeholders in New York City. These uses include inputs to predictive flood models, generation of real-time flood alerts for community members and emergency response teams, storm recovery assistance and cataloging of storm impacts, and informing infrastructure design and investment for long-term flood resilience project planning.

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