single-dr.php

JDR Vol.16 No.3 pp. 429-436
(2021)
doi: 10.20965/jdr.2021.p0429

Survey Report:

Scenario Analysis of Sluice Gate Operations for Evaluating Inland Flood Damage

Hiromichi Muroi, Kensuke Mine, and Yoshiki Eguchi

Waterworks Bureau, City of Kawasaki
1 Miyamoto-cho, Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki, Kanagawa 210-8577, Japan

Corresponding author

Received:
October 1, 2020
Accepted:
November 26, 2020
Published:
April 1, 2021
Keywords:
Typhoon Hagibis 2019, sewer, sluice gate, inland flood simulation model, Tama River
Abstract

Typhoon Hagibis, which hit Japan directly on October 12, 2019, caused great damage, including the flooding of rivers, across various parts of Japan. The Tama River, which flows north of Kawasaki City, also experienced flooding which exceeded the designed high water level; although it did not cause fluvial flooding, river water flowed into the urban areas through the sewerage system, causing unprecedented inundation damage. This damage was reproduced with the inland flood simulation model. Furthermore, we performed simulations in which the water level, precipitation, and sluice gate operation of the Tama River differed from actual conditions, and compared them with the actual damage. Based on these results, we examined methods for reducing inundation damage, such as improving the operation method of sluice gates, and confirmed their effects.

Cite this article as:
H. Muroi, K. Mine, and Y. Eguchi, “Scenario Analysis of Sluice Gate Operations for Evaluating Inland Flood Damage,” J. Disaster Res., Vol.16 No.3, pp. 429-436, 2021.
Data files:
References
  1. [1] K. Mitsui, K. Kodera, and T. Inoue, “Change of Land Use in Tama River Bed in Kanto District, Japan,” J. Japan. Soc. Hydrol. and Water Resour., Vol.7, No.3, pp. 204-213, 1994.
  2. [2] S. Hoshino, M. Esteban, T. Mikami, H. Takagi, and T. Shibayama, “Estimation of increase in storm surge damage due to climate change and sea level rise in the Greater Tokyo area,” Nat. Hazards, Vol.80, No.1, pp. 539-565, 2016.
  3. [3] T. Shimozono, Y. Tajima, K. Kumagai, T. Arikawa, Y. Oda, Y. Shigihara, N. Mori, and T. Suzuki, “Coastal impacts of super typhoon Hagibis on Greater Tokyo and Shizuoka areas, Japan,” Coastal Engineering J., Vol.62, No.2, pp. 129-145, 2020.
  4. [4] L. Moya, E. Mas, and S. Koshimura, “Learning from the 2018 Western Japan Heavy Rains to Detect Floods during the 2019 Hagibis Typhoon,” Remote Sens., Vol.12, No.14, p. 2244, 2020.

*This site is desgined based on HTML5 and CSS3 for modern browsers, e.g. Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, Opera.

Last updated on Apr. 22, 2024