Buyers Guide 2010

Technology and Information Management

Tools for stormwater managers and hydrologists

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By Carol Brzozowski

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“The predictive models can help us identify the future threat, which is what the warning time is all about,” says Janek. “We’ve been running the models in our urban watersheds continuously, and we found that in the urban watersheds, they track very consistently with the USGS gauges over time, so that provides us a level of confidence in those models. If we get a forecast, we’ll believe that forecast.”

Austin also is working with Vflo forecast information in conjunction with Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) floodplain maps to get them digitally and spatially oriented, says Janek. “We’re taking the output we get from that model and are developing predictive floodplain maps from those,” she adds. “We are able to create a surface of the floodplain from the Vflo model and do an assessment of our roadways or areas that frequently flood.

“For instance, we’ll know in advance if we have a particular roadway that will be inundated, or if we have an area that will need to be evacuated,” continues Janek. “We are working toward getting that
citywide.”

The system has helped Austin in future stormwater management designs by providing physical data, says Janek. “To have the distributed rainfall—where it falls within the watershed, how intense and how long—determines a lot of what our flooding situation will look like and how much warning time we have—and how well our infrastructure behaves,” she adds.

The Vieux systems have helped Austin save time, Janek points out. “One of the nice features about them is that we can create, modify, and evaluate these models over time,” she notes. “Every time you develop a model, there will typically be times you need to go back and recalibrate it based upon additional information that you receive.”

The learning curve for the Vieux systems is fairly simple, she says. “It’s intuitive. It does take a fair amount of effort for the development of the Vflo models and the calibration over time. That is a little bit more intensive. It is something the Vieux folks will work with us on, so it’s certainly not an insurmountable task.

“In Austin, we’ve been fortunate in that we are utilizing a lot of the work that has already been done—whether it’s been done by FEMA, or through all of the historical information we have, or through our gauging network. We have a lot of the pieces that are already created, so we are taking advantage of them.”

Planning Capital Improvements in Fort Worth
To the north of Austin, Fort Worth, TX, also has a reputation for flash flooding. Fort Worth has an area of 300 square miles and an annual rainfall of about 36 inches.

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“Typically, our heaviest rainy seasons are in the spring,” says Steve Eubanks, a senior professional engineer in charge of stormwater planning for Fort Worth, an NPDES Phase I community.

“We can get about 20 to 25 inches in the course of two or three months,” adds Eubanks. “Typically, we have wet springs every three years or so. It seems, lately, like it’s been two dry years and a wet year, two dry years and a very wet year.” Consequently, the city has had to deal with a lot of flash flooding as a result of spring and summer thunderstorms. Next Page >

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