Donald Watson, Michele Adams
Design for Flooding (eBook, ePUB)
Architecture, Landscape, and Urban Design for Resilience to Climate Change
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Donald Watson, Michele Adams
Design for Flooding (eBook, ePUB)
Architecture, Landscape, and Urban Design for Resilience to Climate Change
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"Design for Flooding contains considerable useful information for practitioners and students. Watson and Adams fill the void for new thinking...and they advance our ability to create more sustainable, regenerative, and resilient places." --Landscape Architecture Magazine
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"Design for Flooding contains considerable useful information for practitioners and students. Watson and Adams fill the void for new thinking...and they advance our ability to create more sustainable, regenerative, and resilient places." --Landscape Architecture Magazine
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Oktober 2010
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780470890028
- Artikelnr.: 37300254
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Oktober 2010
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780470890028
- Artikelnr.: 37300254
DONALD WATSON, FAIA, an architect and planner, is former chair of the Yale School of Architecture Environmental Design Program, and former professor and dean of the School of Architecture, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He received the 2002 ACSA Distinguished Professor Award and the 2005 AARC Haecker Leadership Award for Architectural Research. His publications include Climatic Building Design, winner in the Architecture and Urban Planning category of the American Publishers Award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence. MICHELE ADAMS, P.E., a water resources engineer, is principal and founder of Meliora Environmental Design in Kimberton, Pennsylvania. Her work encompasses environ- mentally sensitive site design and sustainable water resources engineering.
Preface and Acknowledgments vii Foreword by Carol Franklin, RLA, FASLA ix Foreword by Daniel E. Williams, FAIA xi Introduction xv Part I: Nature of Water 1 Chapter 1: Weather 3 1.1 Sun and Earth 3 1.2 The Atmosphere 6 1.3 Weather 17 Chapter 2: Land and Water 31 2.1 Water and Carbon Cycles 31 2.2 Biodiversity and the Landscape 36 2.3 Follow the Water: The Opportunity for Watershed Planning 43 Chapter 3: Flooding 49 3.1 Flooding from Increased Precipitation 49 3.2 Flooding from Severe Storms 54 3.3 Economic and Social Costs of Water-Related Natural Disasters 61 Part II: Design With Water 67 Chapter 4: The Natural Landscape 71 4.1 Understanding the Natural Water Balance 71 4.2 When the Water Balance Is Altered 74 4.3 Soils and Vegetation 78 4.4 Subsurface Water Movement 83 4.5 Stream Systems, Wetlands, Riparian Zones, and Floodplains 84 Chapter 5: The Altered Landscape 91 5.1 When the Landscape Is Altered 91 5.2 Altered Stream Systems and Increased Flood Damage 95 5.3 Why Detention Does Not Solve Flooding 98 5.4 Summary: The Natural Landscape as a Model for Resilient Design 99 Chapter 6: Design for Inland Flooding 103 6.1 Resilient Design for Inland Flooding 103 6.2 Tools for Watershed Protection 125 6.3 Communities and Buildings in Floodplains 129 Part III: Flood-Resistant Design 131 Chapter 7: Flood Design Analysis 135 7.1 Definition of Terms 135 7.2 Flood Elevation: Base Flood and Design Flood 143 Chapter 8: The Coast 151 8.1 Coastal Processes 151 8.2 Shoreline Protection 160 8.3 Flood Barriers and Floodgates 164 8.4 Summary of Coastal Protection Measures 164 Chapter 9: Flood Design Practices for Buildings 169 9.1 Overview of Flood Design 169 9.2 Flood Design at the Building Scale 176 Part IV: Design For Resilience 197 Chapter 10: Flood-Resistant Design for Sites and Communities 199 10.1 Coastal Communities 199 10.2 Comprehensive Planning for Resilient Communities 207 10.3 Local Actions to Build Community Resilience 210 Chapter 11: Sea Level Rise 219 11.1 Sea Level Rise: The Issues 220 11.2 Sea Level Rise: Design Responses 223 Chapter 12: Design for Resilience 257 12.1 The Wave of the Future 257 12.2 Models for National and International Action 259 12.3 Design Resolution 268 Epilogue 271 Glossary 273 Index 295
Preface and Acknowledgments. Foreword (Carol Franklin, RLA, FASLA) Foreword
(Daniel E. Williams, FAIA). Introduction. PART I: NATURE OF WATER. Chapter
1: Weather. 1.1 Sun and Earth. 1.2 The Atmosphere. 1.3 Weather. Chapter 2:
Land and Water. 2.1 Water and Carbon Cycles. 2.2 Biodiversity and the
Landscape. 2.3 Follow the Water: The Opportunity for Watershed Planning.
Chapter 3: Flooding. 3.1 Flooding from Increased Precipitation. 3.2
Flooding from Severe Storms. 3.3 Economic and Social Costs of Water-Related
Natural Disasters. PART II: DESIGN WITH WATER. Chapter 4: The Natural
Landscape. 4.1 Understanding the Natural Water Balance. 4.2 When the Water
Balance Is Altered. 4.3 Soils and Vegetation. 4.4 Subsurface Water
Movement. 4.5 Stream Systems, Wetlands, Riparian Zones, and Floodplains.
Chapter 5: The Altered Landscape. 5.1 When the Landscape Is Altered. 5.2
Altered Stream Systems and Increased Flood Damage. 5.3 Why Detention Does
Not Solve Flooding. 5.4 Summary: The Natural Landscape as a Model for
Resilient Design. Chapter 6: Design for Inland Flooding. 6.1 Resilient
Design for Inland Flooding. 6.2 Tools for Watershed Protection. 6.3
Communities and Buildings in Floodplains. PART III: FLOOD-RESISTANT DESIGN.
Chapter 7: Flood Design Analysis. 7.1 Definition of Terms. 7.2 Flood
Elevation: Base Flood and Design Flood. Chapter 8: The Coast. 8.1 Coastal
Processes. 8.2 Shoreline Protection. 8.3 Flood Barriers and Floodgates. 8.4
Summary of Coastal Protection Measures. Chapter 9: Flood Design Practices
for Buildings. 9.1 Overview of Flood Design. 9.2 Flood Design at the
Building Scale. PART IV: DESIGN FOR RESILIENCE. Chapter 10: Flood-Resistant
Design for Sites and Communities. 10.1 Coastal Communities. 10.2
Comprehensive Planning for Resilient Communities. 10.3 Local Actions to
Build Community Resilience. Chapter 11: Sea Level Rise. 11.1 Sea Level
Rise: The Issues. 11.2 Sea Level Rise: Design Responses. Chapter 12: Design
for Resilience. 12.1 The Wave of the Future. 12.2 Models for National and
International Action. 12.3 Design Resolution. Epilogue. Glossary. Index.
(Daniel E. Williams, FAIA). Introduction. PART I: NATURE OF WATER. Chapter
1: Weather. 1.1 Sun and Earth. 1.2 The Atmosphere. 1.3 Weather. Chapter 2:
Land and Water. 2.1 Water and Carbon Cycles. 2.2 Biodiversity and the
Landscape. 2.3 Follow the Water: The Opportunity for Watershed Planning.
Chapter 3: Flooding. 3.1 Flooding from Increased Precipitation. 3.2
Flooding from Severe Storms. 3.3 Economic and Social Costs of Water-Related
Natural Disasters. PART II: DESIGN WITH WATER. Chapter 4: The Natural
Landscape. 4.1 Understanding the Natural Water Balance. 4.2 When the Water
Balance Is Altered. 4.3 Soils and Vegetation. 4.4 Subsurface Water
Movement. 4.5 Stream Systems, Wetlands, Riparian Zones, and Floodplains.
Chapter 5: The Altered Landscape. 5.1 When the Landscape Is Altered. 5.2
Altered Stream Systems and Increased Flood Damage. 5.3 Why Detention Does
Not Solve Flooding. 5.4 Summary: The Natural Landscape as a Model for
Resilient Design. Chapter 6: Design for Inland Flooding. 6.1 Resilient
Design for Inland Flooding. 6.2 Tools for Watershed Protection. 6.3
Communities and Buildings in Floodplains. PART III: FLOOD-RESISTANT DESIGN.
Chapter 7: Flood Design Analysis. 7.1 Definition of Terms. 7.2 Flood
Elevation: Base Flood and Design Flood. Chapter 8: The Coast. 8.1 Coastal
Processes. 8.2 Shoreline Protection. 8.3 Flood Barriers and Floodgates. 8.4
Summary of Coastal Protection Measures. Chapter 9: Flood Design Practices
for Buildings. 9.1 Overview of Flood Design. 9.2 Flood Design at the
Building Scale. PART IV: DESIGN FOR RESILIENCE. Chapter 10: Flood-Resistant
Design for Sites and Communities. 10.1 Coastal Communities. 10.2
Comprehensive Planning for Resilient Communities. 10.3 Local Actions to
Build Community Resilience. Chapter 11: Sea Level Rise. 11.1 Sea Level
Rise: The Issues. 11.2 Sea Level Rise: Design Responses. Chapter 12: Design
for Resilience. 12.1 The Wave of the Future. 12.2 Models for National and
International Action. 12.3 Design Resolution. Epilogue. Glossary. Index.
Preface and Acknowledgments vii Foreword by Carol Franklin, RLA, FASLA ix Foreword by Daniel E. Williams, FAIA xi Introduction xv Part I: Nature of Water 1 Chapter 1: Weather 3 1.1 Sun and Earth 3 1.2 The Atmosphere 6 1.3 Weather 17 Chapter 2: Land and Water 31 2.1 Water and Carbon Cycles 31 2.2 Biodiversity and the Landscape 36 2.3 Follow the Water: The Opportunity for Watershed Planning 43 Chapter 3: Flooding 49 3.1 Flooding from Increased Precipitation 49 3.2 Flooding from Severe Storms 54 3.3 Economic and Social Costs of Water-Related Natural Disasters 61 Part II: Design With Water 67 Chapter 4: The Natural Landscape 71 4.1 Understanding the Natural Water Balance 71 4.2 When the Water Balance Is Altered 74 4.3 Soils and Vegetation 78 4.4 Subsurface Water Movement 83 4.5 Stream Systems, Wetlands, Riparian Zones, and Floodplains 84 Chapter 5: The Altered Landscape 91 5.1 When the Landscape Is Altered 91 5.2 Altered Stream Systems and Increased Flood Damage 95 5.3 Why Detention Does Not Solve Flooding 98 5.4 Summary: The Natural Landscape as a Model for Resilient Design 99 Chapter 6: Design for Inland Flooding 103 6.1 Resilient Design for Inland Flooding 103 6.2 Tools for Watershed Protection 125 6.3 Communities and Buildings in Floodplains 129 Part III: Flood-Resistant Design 131 Chapter 7: Flood Design Analysis 135 7.1 Definition of Terms 135 7.2 Flood Elevation: Base Flood and Design Flood 143 Chapter 8: The Coast 151 8.1 Coastal Processes 151 8.2 Shoreline Protection 160 8.3 Flood Barriers and Floodgates 164 8.4 Summary of Coastal Protection Measures 164 Chapter 9: Flood Design Practices for Buildings 169 9.1 Overview of Flood Design 169 9.2 Flood Design at the Building Scale 176 Part IV: Design For Resilience 197 Chapter 10: Flood-Resistant Design for Sites and Communities 199 10.1 Coastal Communities 199 10.2 Comprehensive Planning for Resilient Communities 207 10.3 Local Actions to Build Community Resilience 210 Chapter 11: Sea Level Rise 219 11.1 Sea Level Rise: The Issues 220 11.2 Sea Level Rise: Design Responses 223 Chapter 12: Design for Resilience 257 12.1 The Wave of the Future 257 12.2 Models for National and International Action 259 12.3 Design Resolution 268 Epilogue 271 Glossary 273 Index 295
Preface and Acknowledgments. Foreword (Carol Franklin, RLA, FASLA) Foreword
(Daniel E. Williams, FAIA). Introduction. PART I: NATURE OF WATER. Chapter
1: Weather. 1.1 Sun and Earth. 1.2 The Atmosphere. 1.3 Weather. Chapter 2:
Land and Water. 2.1 Water and Carbon Cycles. 2.2 Biodiversity and the
Landscape. 2.3 Follow the Water: The Opportunity for Watershed Planning.
Chapter 3: Flooding. 3.1 Flooding from Increased Precipitation. 3.2
Flooding from Severe Storms. 3.3 Economic and Social Costs of Water-Related
Natural Disasters. PART II: DESIGN WITH WATER. Chapter 4: The Natural
Landscape. 4.1 Understanding the Natural Water Balance. 4.2 When the Water
Balance Is Altered. 4.3 Soils and Vegetation. 4.4 Subsurface Water
Movement. 4.5 Stream Systems, Wetlands, Riparian Zones, and Floodplains.
Chapter 5: The Altered Landscape. 5.1 When the Landscape Is Altered. 5.2
Altered Stream Systems and Increased Flood Damage. 5.3 Why Detention Does
Not Solve Flooding. 5.4 Summary: The Natural Landscape as a Model for
Resilient Design. Chapter 6: Design for Inland Flooding. 6.1 Resilient
Design for Inland Flooding. 6.2 Tools for Watershed Protection. 6.3
Communities and Buildings in Floodplains. PART III: FLOOD-RESISTANT DESIGN.
Chapter 7: Flood Design Analysis. 7.1 Definition of Terms. 7.2 Flood
Elevation: Base Flood and Design Flood. Chapter 8: The Coast. 8.1 Coastal
Processes. 8.2 Shoreline Protection. 8.3 Flood Barriers and Floodgates. 8.4
Summary of Coastal Protection Measures. Chapter 9: Flood Design Practices
for Buildings. 9.1 Overview of Flood Design. 9.2 Flood Design at the
Building Scale. PART IV: DESIGN FOR RESILIENCE. Chapter 10: Flood-Resistant
Design for Sites and Communities. 10.1 Coastal Communities. 10.2
Comprehensive Planning for Resilient Communities. 10.3 Local Actions to
Build Community Resilience. Chapter 11: Sea Level Rise. 11.1 Sea Level
Rise: The Issues. 11.2 Sea Level Rise: Design Responses. Chapter 12: Design
for Resilience. 12.1 The Wave of the Future. 12.2 Models for National and
International Action. 12.3 Design Resolution. Epilogue. Glossary. Index.
(Daniel E. Williams, FAIA). Introduction. PART I: NATURE OF WATER. Chapter
1: Weather. 1.1 Sun and Earth. 1.2 The Atmosphere. 1.3 Weather. Chapter 2:
Land and Water. 2.1 Water and Carbon Cycles. 2.2 Biodiversity and the
Landscape. 2.3 Follow the Water: The Opportunity for Watershed Planning.
Chapter 3: Flooding. 3.1 Flooding from Increased Precipitation. 3.2
Flooding from Severe Storms. 3.3 Economic and Social Costs of Water-Related
Natural Disasters. PART II: DESIGN WITH WATER. Chapter 4: The Natural
Landscape. 4.1 Understanding the Natural Water Balance. 4.2 When the Water
Balance Is Altered. 4.3 Soils and Vegetation. 4.4 Subsurface Water
Movement. 4.5 Stream Systems, Wetlands, Riparian Zones, and Floodplains.
Chapter 5: The Altered Landscape. 5.1 When the Landscape Is Altered. 5.2
Altered Stream Systems and Increased Flood Damage. 5.3 Why Detention Does
Not Solve Flooding. 5.4 Summary: The Natural Landscape as a Model for
Resilient Design. Chapter 6: Design for Inland Flooding. 6.1 Resilient
Design for Inland Flooding. 6.2 Tools for Watershed Protection. 6.3
Communities and Buildings in Floodplains. PART III: FLOOD-RESISTANT DESIGN.
Chapter 7: Flood Design Analysis. 7.1 Definition of Terms. 7.2 Flood
Elevation: Base Flood and Design Flood. Chapter 8: The Coast. 8.1 Coastal
Processes. 8.2 Shoreline Protection. 8.3 Flood Barriers and Floodgates. 8.4
Summary of Coastal Protection Measures. Chapter 9: Flood Design Practices
for Buildings. 9.1 Overview of Flood Design. 9.2 Flood Design at the
Building Scale. PART IV: DESIGN FOR RESILIENCE. Chapter 10: Flood-Resistant
Design for Sites and Communities. 10.1 Coastal Communities. 10.2
Comprehensive Planning for Resilient Communities. 10.3 Local Actions to
Build Community Resilience. Chapter 11: Sea Level Rise. 11.1 Sea Level
Rise: The Issues. 11.2 Sea Level Rise: Design Responses. Chapter 12: Design
for Resilience. 12.1 The Wave of the Future. 12.2 Models for National and
International Action. 12.3 Design Resolution. Epilogue. Glossary. Index.