ICCE conference and Miami Beach SLR adaptations

News - 19 August 2018 - Webmaster Hydraulic Engineering

This past week, Jeremy Bricker attended the ICCE conference in Baltimore, and visited seawalls and stormwater pumps in Miami Beach. He wrote a short summary of his experiences during this trip which is presented in this article.

Miami Beach is at the forefront of sea level rise adaptation in the US, because it is extremely vulnerable. Built on a barrier island with a subsurface of porous limestone, the  city  has  embarked  on  a  long-term  plan  of  raising  the  elevation  of  the  island together with the installation of concrete seawalls. Due to the higher sea levels, the city’s gravity-driven stormwater drainage system is being fit with pumps to evacuate stormwater to the back bay, and backflow prevention valves to stop seawater from backing up onto the streets through the pipes. One significant difference from the Netherlands is that Miami Beach’s subsurface is porous limestone, so elevated sea level will flood the city regardless of seawalls; this is the reason they are trucking in landfill  from  the  mainland  to  elevate  the  city,  beginning  with  streets,  and  using building code regulations to bring all new commercial structures to build their first floors at the new road level.

Jeremy visited  Miami  Beach  together  with  Prof.  Miguel  Esteban  of  Waseda  University (Japan), and they were briefed by the city’s Director of Public Works, as well as by an environmental scientist from AECOM, the city’s design engineer.

After  this  visit,  they  headed  to  Baltimore  for  the  36th International  Conference  on Coastal Engineering (ICCE), run by ASCE/COPRI. There were approximately 800 talks in 6 parallel sessions. Interesting findings were that Japanese scour research in the  laboratory  uses  settling  velocity  as  the  scaling  parameter  of  importance  for maximum scour depth, not the Shields parameter.  Furthermore, there are no parametric models for the spatial distribution of wind and pressure in extratropical storms, complicating efforts to address extratropical storm surge stochastically. 

Elevated seawall in Miami Beach
Stormwater pump station in Miami Beach
Autonomous trash collector at a river mouth in Baltimore harbor