Floodplain Report

Project Summary

one of the initial steps towards land subdivision is providing a geohazard assessment report. Such reports would try to identify potential risks like liquefaction, flood and rockfall. only  certified geotechnical engineer is eligible to prepare such reports. 

in this case Evertek engineers were dealing with a unique situation. the ground water table was only 2 meters below the ground and the soil deposit consisted mostly of clayey deposits, that although are not prone to liquefaction hazard, due to their low permeability are considered a huge source of concern in flooding. 

after excavating four test pits, each about 2 meters deep, and based on regional bylaws, we concluded that, The “Required Elevation” must be set at an elevation that is not less than 1.7 meters above the existing highest ground elevation measured at the perimeter of the property nor less than 5.5 meters GSC.

a geohazard report would also be a valuable source for future development plans because they provide an insight about soil classification, depth of water table as well as bearing capacity.

 

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Further reading

Flooding is a natural and recurring event for a river or stream. Statistically, streams will equal or exceed the mean annual flood once every 2.33 years (Leopold et al., 1964). Flooding is a result of heavy or continuous rainfall exceeding the absorptive capacity of soil and the flow capacity of rivers, streams, and coastal areas. This causes a watercourse to overflow its banks onto adjacent lands. Floodplains are, in general, those lands most subject to recurring floods, situated adjacent to rivers and streams. Floodplains are therefore “flood-prone” and are hazardous to development activities if the vulnerability of those activities exceeds an acceptable level.

Floodplains can be looked at from several different perspectives: ‘To define a floodplain depends somewhat on the goals in mind. As a topographic category it is quite flat and lies adjacent to a stream; geomorphologically, it is a landform composed primarily of unconsolidated depositional material derived from sediments being transported by the related stream; hydrologically, it is best defined as a landform subject to periodic flooding by a parent stream. A combination of these [characteristics] perhaps comprises the essential criteria for defining the floodplain” (Schmudde, 1968). Most simply, a flood-plain is defined as “a strip of relatively smooth land bordering a stream and overflowed [sic] at a time of high water” (Leopold et al, 1964).

Floods are usually described in terms of their statistical frequency. A “100-year flood” or “100-year floodplain” describes an event or an area subject to a 1% probability of a certain size flood occurring in any given year. For example, Figure 8-1 shows this frequency in terms of flood levels and floodplains. This concept does not mean such a flood will occur only once in one hundred years. Whether or not it occurs in a given year has no bearing on the fact that there is still a 1% chance of a similar occurrence in the following year. Since floodplains can be mapped, the boundary of the 100-year flood is commonly used in floodplain mitigation programs to identify areas where the risk of flooding is significant. Any other statistical frequency of a flood event may be chosen depending on the degree of risk that is selected for evaluation, e.g., 5-year, 20-year, 50-year, 500-year floodplain.

Frequency of inundation depends on the climate, the material that makes up the banks of the stream, and the channel slope. Where substantial rainfall occurs in a particular season each year, or where the annual flood is derived principally from snowmelt, the floodplain may be inundated nearly every year, even along large streams with very small channel slopes. In regions without extended periods of below-freezing temperatures, floods usually occur in the season of highest precipitation. Where most floods are the result of snowmelt, often accompanied by rainfall, the flood season is spring or early summer.

Refs:

[1] FRASER VALLEY REGIONAL DISTRICT, Bylaw No. 0681, 2005 

[2] https://www.oas.org/