JOURNAL ARTICLE

Flood risk modelling based on tangible and intangible urban flood damage quantification

Marie‐Claire ten VeldhuisF.H.L.R. Clemens

Year: 2010 Journal:   Water Science & Technology Vol: 62 (1)Pages: 189-195   Publisher: Pergamon Press

Abstract

The usual way to quantify flood damage is by application stage-damage functions. Urban flood incidents in flat areas mostly result in intangible damages like traffic disturbance and inconvenience for pedestrians caused by pools at building entrances, on sidewalks and parking spaces. Stage-damage functions are not well suited to quantify damage for these floods. This paper presents an alternative method to quantify flood damage that uses data from a municipal call centre. The data cover a period of 10 years and contain detailed information on consequences of urban flood incidents. Call data are linked to individual flood incidents and then assigned to specific damage classes. The results are used to draw risk curves for a range of flood incidents of increasing damage severity. Risk curves for aggregated groups of damage classes show that total flood risk related to traffic disturbance is larger than risk of damage to private properties, which in turn is larger than flood risk related to human health. Risk curves for detailed damage classes show how distinctions can be made between flood risks related to many types of occupational use in urban areas. This information can be used to support prioritisation of actions for flood risk reduction. Since call data directly convey how citizens are affected by urban flood incidents, they provide valuable information that complements flood risk analysis based on hydraulic models.

Keywords:
Flood myth Damages Floodplain Environmental science Environmental planning Risk analysis (engineering) Geography Business Cartography

Metrics

30
Cited By
1.33
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
9
Refs
0.82
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Flood Risk Assessment and Management
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
Evacuation and Crowd Dynamics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Ocean Engineering
Hydrology and Drought Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Intangible Flood Damage Quantification

Atthanan LekuthaiSuphat Vongvisessomjai

Journal:   Water Resources Management Year: 2001 Vol: 15 (5)Pages: 343-362
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Tangible and Intangible Flood damage evaluation

Sara FrongiaGiovanni Maria SechiMark Davison

Journal:   E3S Web of Conferences Year: 2016 Vol: 7 Pages: 05007-05007
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Uncertainty quantification of flood damage estimation for urban drainage risk management

Masaru MoritaYeou Koung Tung

Journal:   Water Science & Technology Year: 2019 Vol: 80 (3)Pages: 478-486
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Tangible and intangible ex post assessment of flood-induced damage to cultural heritage

Claudia De LuciaMichele AmaddiiChiara Arrighi

Journal:   Natural hazards and earth system sciences Year: 2024 Vol: 24 (12)Pages: 4317-4339
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.