2016
DOI: 10.3992/jgb.11.3.110.1
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A Gis-Based Procedure for Measuring the Efects of the Built Environment on Urban Flash Floods

Abstract: Urban flooding has been a severe problem for many cities around the world as it remains one of the greatest threats to the property and safety of human communities. In Australia, it is seen as the most expensive natural hazard. However, urban areas that are impervious to rainwater have been sharply increasing owing to booming construction activities and rapid urbanisation. The change in the built environment may cause more frequent and longer duration of flooding in floodprone urban regions. Thus, the flood in… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Urbanization greatly reduces the permeable area of the urban underlying surface, causing a lot of urban rainwater to flow onto the ground or into the artificial drainage system, instead of naturally being infiltrated into the ground and absorbed by the soil [14,15]. When the rainfall exceeds the capacity of the drainage system, especially in some areas with deterioration and insufficiency of the capacity of urban drainage infrastructure and lack of excellent urban planning strategies [16,17], stormwater has no way to go, but must stay on the ground to form urban waterlogging [18,19]. In addition, rapid urban expansion exacerbates the urban heat island effect [20], leading to the formation of hot air flows over the city, which accumulate and thicken, and eventually form precipitation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Urbanization greatly reduces the permeable area of the urban underlying surface, causing a lot of urban rainwater to flow onto the ground or into the artificial drainage system, instead of naturally being infiltrated into the ground and absorbed by the soil [14,15]. When the rainfall exceeds the capacity of the drainage system, especially in some areas with deterioration and insufficiency of the capacity of urban drainage infrastructure and lack of excellent urban planning strategies [16,17], stormwater has no way to go, but must stay on the ground to form urban waterlogging [18,19]. In addition, rapid urban expansion exacerbates the urban heat island effect [20], leading to the formation of hot air flows over the city, which accumulate and thicken, and eventually form precipitation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%