Body

Flooding 101: Consortium Offers Analysis and Informational Resources

Dec. 19, 2017

The Greater Houston Flood Mitigation Consortium formed after Hurricane Harvey. Here's some of what they've been working on.

Flooded waters

The Greater Houston Flood Mitigation Consortium formed after Hurricane Harvey. Here's some of what they've been working on.

After Hurricane Harvey, the Greater Houston Flood Mitigation Consortium was founded in an effort to collect and centralize good research on flooding in the Houston area. A collaboration between several universities, the Kinder Institute for Urban Research has been participating in the effort as well.

“We want to ensure that all communities benefit from flood mitigation efforts, and we believe that providing the best possible information to decision-makers and residents alike is the best path to doing so,” the website reads.

In addition to gathering research reports, the website also offers a series of fact sheets explaining everything from how floodplains get designated to the impact of a detention basin in a development.

Graphic

Source: Greater Houston Flood Mitigation Consortium.

Types of flooding graphic

Source: Greater Houston Flood Mitigation Consortium.

Detention basins are often included in new developments as flood mitigation strategies but how do they work?

As floodplains evolve over time, who decides how the boundaries change?

When making recovery funding decisions, how can governments assess damage at a large scale?

The Consortium explores these and other issues in detail.

Christof Spieler, project manager for the Consortium as well as an engineer and board member with Metro, outlined the group’s mission in the Houston Chronicle, including evaluating proposed engineering projects along waterways, creating better alert systems and public information resources for individuals and mapping flood risk in a more comprehensive way than has been done over the years.

“Together, let us find the vision and courage to rebuild a greater Houston that is a model of resiliency, vitality and equity,” wrote Spieler.

Body
Body

Subscribe

Mailing Address

6100 Main St. MS-208
Houston, TX 77005-1892

kinder@rice.edu
713-348-4132 

Subscribe to our e-newsletter

Physical Address

Rice University
Kraft Hall
6100 Main Street, Suite 305
Houston, TX 77005-1892

Featured Sponsor

Support the Kinder Institute