Abstract
Government and consulting experts on flood mitigation generally face difficulties when trying to explain the science of extreme flooding to the general public, in particular the concept of a return period. Too often, for example, people perceive they are safe for the next 100 years after a 1 V 100-year return-period flood has hit their town. UK flood practitioners therefore gave us the challenge to design an outreach tool that conceptualises the science of flooding in a way that is accessible to and directly engages the public, and in particular demonstrates what a return period is. Furthermore, we were tasked with designing a live 3-D physical model rather than a graphical or animated 2-D game on a screen. We show here how we tackled that challenge by designing, constructing, and showcasing the Wetropolis Flood Demonstrator. Wetropolis is a transportable and conceptual physical model with random rainfall, river flow, a flood plain, an upland reservoir, a porous moor, representing the upper catchment and visualising groundwater flow, and a city which can flood following extreme and random rainfall. A key novelty is the supply of rainfall everyWetropolis day. Several aspects of Wetropolis are considered.
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CITATION STYLE
Bokhove, O., Hicks, T., Zweers, W., & Kent, T. (2020). Wetropolis extreme rainfall and flood demonstrator: From mathematical design to outreach. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 24(5), 2483–2503. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-24-2483-2020
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