How Do Flood Control Structures Work?

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  • Опубліковано 4 січ 2021
  • The things we build to protect ourselves from flooding.
    The bundle deal with Curiosity Stream has ended, but you can still get a great discount on Nebula and support Practical Engineering here: go.nebula.tv/practical-engine...
    Every year floods make their way through populated areas, costing lives and millions of dollars in damages, devastating communities, and grinding local economies to a halt. Nearly every major city across the world is susceptible to extreme rainfall and has areas that are vulnerable to flood risk. Luckily, we’ve developed strategies and structures over the years to reduce our vulnerability and mitigate our risk.
    -Patreon: / practicalengineering
    -Website: practical.engineering
    This video is sponsored by Nebula.
    Tonic and Energy by Elexive is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License
    Source: • Elexive - Tonic and En...
    Video supplied by Getty Images.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 991

  • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
    @PracticalEngineeringChannel  3 роки тому +76

    👷Interested in videos on flooding? Subscribe to follow along!
    practical.engineering/email-list
    ▶️ Get CuriosityStream AND Nebula for 26% off! curiositystream.com/PracticalEngineering ▶️

    • @MattsAwesomeStuff
      @MattsAwesomeStuff 3 роки тому +6

      Actually... clicking the link, it's 41% off, not 26% anymore. From a dozen creators, I've been ignoring the Nebula ads all year long and finally just realized you said "per year". Rather than sounding like an ad-read about why it's nice... you should emphasize, it's currently *$11.79 PER YEAR* . Per year! For all of these educational channels. And, since most people won't be into it for themselves, you should really stress memberships as gifts. $11.79 PER YEAR for all this educational and entertainment content. I'll probably actually sign up now. I was figuring it was going to be like, $50-100/year and my eyes just glaze over and my brain turns off.

    • @Dan_Fahl
      @Dan_Fahl 3 роки тому +1

      Climate change is a hoax

    • @ValDominator
      @ValDominator 3 роки тому +1

      i love floods

    • @CS-Student
      @CS-Student 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dan_Fahl If you believe that climate change is a hoax, you're gone already, lmao.

    • @NappyWayz
      @NappyWayz 3 роки тому

      Speaking of water could you do a video on lawn bubbles? I find them interesting and wonder if you have any insight.

  • @Yora21
    @Yora21 3 роки тому +656

    On the North Sea, we also often get floods that are not caused by too much water coming down, but by the water not being able to flow into the sea. Especially in winter we often get extremely strong winds from the West. Just the wind pressing only on the water surface in the river slows the water flow enough to make all the water coming behind pile up. And being one of the flattest large open areas in the world, it doesn't take much to flood really big areas.

    • @johnsmith1474
      @johnsmith1474 3 роки тому +15

      The largest flattest open area on Earth is likely in Siberia, then perhaps the Great Plains of the USA, I cannot think of any place with Western exposure to the North Sea that is even 1/100th as large. And what you referring to is tidal surge not the slowing of river flow by wind. But I am interested to know where you are located ....

    • @sudazima
      @sudazima 3 роки тому +53

      @@johnsmith1474 the netherlands..

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 3 роки тому +51

      @@johnsmith1474 European plain goes from Spain to the Urals.

    • @ncot_tech
      @ncot_tech 3 роки тому +1

      Spring tides where the moon pulls more strongly on the incoming tide does this too.

    • @stabileseitenlage
      @stabileseitenlage 3 роки тому +26

      @@johnsmith1474 To be fair, I think living at the sea he would know what the tide is and how it effects the sea and rivers.
      I never heard about wind hindering the flow of rivers, but I can imagine it to a certain extend.

  • @KavehMagaura
    @KavehMagaura 3 роки тому +1064

    The simulation of the hydraulics would be a great DLC for Cities: Skylines

    • @stevecarter8810
      @stevecarter8810 3 роки тому +116

      God yes, whenever I put a dam in in CS IT breaks my brain.

    • @greenconscious210
      @greenconscious210 3 роки тому +86

      @@stevecarter8810 I've spent so much time and (game) money trying to optimize hydro-poo dams for good electrical generation

    • @IstasPumaNevada
      @IstasPumaNevada 3 роки тому +91

      I'd very much like that. Unfortunately, simulating water flow realistically is computationally expensive, and often requires compromise (hence the wonky water flow in C:S).

    • @fireofdestruction7753
      @fireofdestruction7753 3 роки тому +39

      @@IstasPumaNevada its been 5 years since release I'm sure theres something now they could do to improve the water physics

    • @applemachome
      @applemachome 3 роки тому +31

      I enjoy having ships go over dry land with a weird configuration of dams.

  • @CS-Student
    @CS-Student 3 роки тому +306

    Love this channel, despite having no connection with engineering. Knowledge always benefits everyone. Thank you for making these informative videos, Grady! :)

    • @Cythil
      @Cythil 3 роки тому +12

      We all have a connection to engineering since we lived in an engineered environment. So it is good to have at least a basic understanding of how these things work. I bet a more than a few of use live near a waterway for example. And now we might have a greater understanding why we can and can not do certain stuff around that waterway. Or why some argue so much about how to manage it. ;)

    • @kevincangjaya661
      @kevincangjaya661 3 роки тому +2

      indeed, such as his saying "instead of reducing flood, we try to reduce the flood consequences" in which I think is a good thinking pattern not only for engineering

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 3 роки тому

      I'm a programmer, despite knowing fuckall about engineering I still love this channel

    • @TheSuperhoden
      @TheSuperhoden 3 роки тому

      @@Cythil meh, knowing it doesn't add value as humans specialised. So hes right and hes not involved. Hes a passive bystander

  • @MagusSartori
    @MagusSartori 3 роки тому +60

    I would love to see you talk about beaver in the context of rivers, water, and flood control.
    Beaver ponds and dams have been shown to reduce flooding by increasing the carrying capacity of the water system, allowing the whole system to absorb more water before it flows downstream. Also, considering that beaver were ubiquitous in the continental united states prior to western colonization, the flooding of rivers which we consider normal might well be abnormal and caused by beaver's local extinction

    • @myrojyn
      @myrojyn 3 роки тому +3

      I also want to learn more about dam beavers. I think it'd be great to learn about dam behavior overall

    • @mikekahl5609
      @mikekahl5609 2 роки тому +3

      I've never seen a beaver lower the water level in his damn to reduce flooding. What ever water flows into his pond has to come out the other side. Unless the water level is lowered, damns can not control floods.

    • @iwanabana
      @iwanabana 2 роки тому

      exactamente!

    • @MagusSartori
      @MagusSartori 2 роки тому +5

      @@mikekahl5609 Not quite. Remember that beaver dams act like a large number of partially filled ponds dotted along waterways. So when heavy rains fall the dam-pond has unused capacity to retain that water that would normally rush down stream immediately.
      As for release, after the storm the water will evaporate or seep away into groundwater over time rather than needing to be release.
      An individual pond will likely only have a fraction of the water capacity of a man made dam, but with many beaver damns over an entire river system it's capturing a huge amount of water that would normally need to immediately go down stream and possibly cause flooding. Then releasing that water slowly to the ground across a huge geographic area

    • @JordanHowellMusic
      @JordanHowellMusic Рік тому

      That’s crazy and crazy awesome! I never really thought about that…would like to see some scientific studies or other research into this, if you have any sources or links!
      Either way, it’s a cool thought, and even though may be more of an …ecologist/zoologist or something, expertise, im sure Grady would have some insight on it!
      Heh!

  • @wompastompa3692
    @wompastompa3692 3 роки тому +219

    Levees are pretty neat. Drove my Chevy to one, but the river was dry.

    • @frankpinmtl
      @frankpinmtl 3 роки тому +48

      Were some good old boys there? Maybe drinking some alcoholic beverages, like whiskey and rye?

    • @fourtwelve412
      @fourtwelve412 3 роки тому +34

      Perhaps they were vocalizing their eminent deaths? Could have occurred that very day, you never know.

    • @christaylor8337
      @christaylor8337 3 роки тому +13

      @@frankpinmtl Sadly, I do believe that they all died that day. At least they got some booze and pie in them, so it wasn't a complete loss.

    • @the.starman
      @the.starman 2 роки тому +4

      Probably sang "This will be the day that I die"

    • @h.p.734
      @h.p.734 2 роки тому +1

      @@christaylor8337 lmaooo nice

  • @MajoraZ
    @MajoraZ 3 роки тому +191

    Flood management and historical hydraulic engineering often gets talked about with Romans and western societies, but there's actually quite a of them for Mesoamerican civilizations like the Aztec and Maya. The Maya city of TIkal for example had huge public rainwater collection reservoirs (as well as individual ones for specific households) with canal systems and levees between them for drainage if one reservoir overflowed and the streets, buildings, etc had channels and drains built into them to redirect the rainwater into them. There were also grids of channels to move water in agricultural areas and from more frequently flooded areas to less flooded ones, and aqueducts with multiple paths and switching stations to change which way they delivered water. There were also smaller reservoirs and canal systems strategically placed out for hundreds of square kilometres in a sprawl of landscaped suburbs around the city center.
    Meanwhile, The Maya city of Palenque, in contrast to TIkal, had problems where rather then not having much access to freshwater and needing complex systems to collect it, Palenque had dozens of springs and many rivers inside the city itself, so it''s massive interconnected systems of aqueducts, underground pipes running underneath plazas buildings, and streets, canals, pooling basins, etc were designed to move water out. At least one of these underground aqueducts was pressurized to make a large fountain, and the city had some toilets.
    Another example located in the temperate to arid hills of Central Mexico rather then the tropical lowlands during the same period is Teotihuacan. It also used agricultural canals and rainwater collection reservoirs, and it also re-directed rivers that cut through the city and were turned into geometric canals that went along with the city's grid layout, aligned with specific landmarks in the city, such as having it run alongside the Temple of the Feathered Serpent, which had water associations. The plaza in front of the temple could also be flooded for religious ceremonies. Some of the city's residential complexes (which, were almost all lavish, multi-room palaces, even for commoners), also had plumbing systems, and had running water from rainwater reservoirs, to use for drinking and cooking. The city also had toilets, though how they connected to other water systems is unclear.
    Fast forward another 1000 years, the core of the Aztec empire was dozens of cities and hundreds of towns all built around and on the islands in a lake basin. Many cities, Especially for the capital of Tenochtitlan, used grids of artificial islands to expand the usable land with Venice like canals between them. Tenochtitlan also had a complex series of aqueducts (including a dual piped one equipped with a switching mechanism), causeways, and levees to manage water flow and link it to other cities in nearby.
    Probably most impressive is the water system for the personal gardens of the rulers of Texcoco, the second most important Aztec city, which was designed by one of it's Kings, Nezahualcoyotl , a renowned poet and who designed a few other aqueduct and levees. This system fed water from the Mexican Sierra Nevada mountain range 5 miles away (at some points the aqueduct rising 150 feet above ground level) onto a hill nearby the gardens, had a system of pools and channels to control the rate of water flow. The water then crossed over a huge stone channel between the gorge of that hill's peak and the peak of the hill (Texcotzingo) the baths were on, at which point the channel formed a circuit around the top of the second hill, filled the baths and a series of shrines and aesthetic displays (complete with statues, painted fresco, carved reliefs, etc), and dropped water off via artificial waterfalls around key points of the gardens below.
    It's all really cool stuff and it's a shame Mesoamerican history isn't taught more.

    • @pennyforyourthots
      @pennyforyourthots 3 роки тому +6

      Is Tenochtitlan the city where they built it over top of a swamp by putting logs into the ground and letting them petrify into rock-like structures to build on top of? I vaguely remember there being a city like that somewhere in mesoamerica, but I don't remember which one it was specifically.

    • @MajoraZ
      @MajoraZ 3 роки тому +18

      @@pennyforyourthots You're mixing some information up, but I think you're thinking of Chinampas, which is indeed the artificial island technique I describe that composed most of Tenochtitlan's area, where a section of the lakebed was staked out with logs then filled with soil, and that soil anchored to the lakebed via planting a tree on it, with the land used as either hydroponic farms with canals between the plots acting as irrigation, or as additional land for constructing more buildings.

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 3 роки тому +12

      there was also the amazing water management system in the kingdom of angkor, in modern day vietnam and cambodia. that area has a dry season/wet season system from monsoons so the kingdom organized massive canal and resevoir systems to control the summer floods and provide during the winter droughts. infact the reservoirs were actually a requirement to stabilize the foundations of many building in angkor-wat, the capitol. unfortunetly one really bad several year drought defeated this system and half the capitol fell into a sand pit. but for a couple hundred years it worked great.

    • @blazertundra
      @blazertundra 3 роки тому +7

      Also the Hohokam of what is today the southwestern USA. Their irrigation canals are what made the harsh desert habitable for human communities. Even after they disappeared, the more recent Native tribes refurbished them for their own use. I've heard some of the canals that cut across Phoenix suburbs today happen to be the same canals dug over a thousand years ago.

    • @fourtwelve412
      @fourtwelve412 3 роки тому +1

      This is awesome info from you all. There's always details I hadn't learned before.
      And I also agree, wish I'd been taught more Central and South American history in school

  • @impmeister1
    @impmeister1 3 роки тому +373

    After many years I finally know the word, americans use for dijk
    Levees!
    Greeting from the levees capital of the world (the netherlands)

    • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
      @PracticalEngineeringChannel  3 роки тому +168

      Some do call them "dikes" after the Dutch word

    • @utuberme1
      @utuberme1 3 роки тому +6

      ua-cam.com/video/FFDYuO53BUk/v-deo.html

    • @MlTGLIED
      @MlTGLIED 3 роки тому +6

      Yeah, greetings from Ostfriesland

    • @Leon_Schuit
      @Leon_Schuit 3 роки тому +43

      @@PracticalEngineeringChannel I would love it if you made a video about how the Dutch manage waterways and the tide. I think a lot of our infrastructure is cutting edge, and that our engineers are among the best in the world when it comes to water management. Even our king is internationally involved as an advisor on water management.

    • @timusmaximus6794
      @timusmaximus6794 3 роки тому +7

      The sea can not beat us!

  • @markmackela1246
    @markmackela1246 3 роки тому +38

    in Ann Arbor, MI, there are two parks on the north and south sides of the city which surround ponds which were built/expanded to divert/slow down vernal streams which might otherwise flood the town and nearby farmland. It’s a real neat idea, I think, and makes for some beautiful wetland park areas

    • @hirshkabaria8329
      @hirshkabaria8329 3 роки тому +1

      Which parks are these? is one the arb?

    • @mitchellfolbe8729
      @mitchellfolbe8729 3 роки тому +3

      Go Blue!

    • @tomb7088
      @tomb7088 3 роки тому

      @@craigjensen6853 Hines Park was built in the 40's to do just that. Years later they built a road and made it a park.

  • @cranemon
    @cranemon 3 роки тому +13

    The Red River Floodway is a neat example of a flood diversion channel. At the time of its construction, it was the second largest excavation project in the world behind the Panama Canal. It protects the city of Winnipeg annually from spring flooding and is estimated to have saved the province billions of dollars in flood damage. The sheer volume of water that you can see passing through it at peak flood is mind-boggling.

  • @fireaza
    @fireaza 3 роки тому +33

    *"OH MY GOD! WHAT'S THAT BEHIND YOU?!"* -Diversion Canal

  • @nicholaspatton1742
    @nicholaspatton1742 3 роки тому +20

    You are a great teacher. You have the ability to explain diverse concepts, breaking them down into simple understandable blocks that you then rejoin as easily. As a renovation carpenter(retired) and life gave me a common sense understanding of engineering, but I often lacked the precise terms and such. Well done Grady!

  • @oetgaol
    @oetgaol 3 роки тому +7

    In the Netherlands we started to reconstruct the natural path of rivers and creeks to slow down the river and increase the water capacity a river van hold. Also we are in the process of giving rivers more space. We saw the fruits of that effort Just this month where a montage sim of rain was dumped in a couple of hours but flooding was somewhat limited especially compared to 93 & 95 when a similar amount of water flowed down the river.

  • @brokentombot
    @brokentombot 3 роки тому +10

    I feel like I knew this stuff by intuition. Then I watch Practical Engineering and realize there is a lot more going on. I love how he adds so many interesting details and bonus facts.

  • @mattthe2nd865
    @mattthe2nd865 3 роки тому +49

    I wish I had you as a teacher in school.

  • @Lyudovik1917
    @Lyudovik1917 3 роки тому +15

    I live in a relatively upstream area of a river, and the town is built on the confluence of two rivers. while im not in danger from the flooding, i do visit the rivers often and calm streams become violent, tearing, ripping monstrous forces. It just goes to show how powerful these things are.
    An intresting thing is the smaller river is more at risk to flooding because it takes less to overtop the banks, but when it does it fills entire areas, whereas the other one can take more water without flooding.
    Either way walking and hiking along flooded rivers is fun (if your careful) as its interesting to see the difference between a flooded and non-flooded river.

  • @sikachu
    @sikachu 3 роки тому +1

    This video reminds me of how Tokyo is dealing with flood by building an underground storage tank, which is really such an amazing engineering invention. Basically, it's similar to the diversion at 5:36 but instead of going into another river right away they go down to underground storage tank first, then those water got pumped out after storm is over.
    Actually, we were living next to one of the river which is used for flood control during the typhoon last year. It was very surreal watching the live camera feed seeing the water level went up to 80% height line, then it started decreasing because they open the diversion gate down to the storage. In the end, our area didn't get flooded, and I'm so thankful for this piece of infrastructure.

  • @serial507023
    @serial507023 3 роки тому +182

    How old dams are replaced? Isn't it is really difficult to say "Replace Hoover Dam"? Not now but some time in future

    • @aadityarajbhattarai46
      @aadityarajbhattarai46 3 роки тому +22

      After the time comes river is diverted, dam is destroyed and realigned. It easily and quickly becomes a sustainable thriving ecosystem after that.

    • @typrus6377
      @typrus6377 3 роки тому +37

      It depends. Dams that impound rivers, streams, etc will require emptying the reservoir then diverting flow to allow for repair, replacement, or outright removal. For storage reservoir dams where the water is pumped or diverted in, they shut off flow in and empty the reservoir.

    • @SuperAWaC
      @SuperAWaC 3 роки тому +28

      @@typrus6377 another option is building a temporary (or permanent) dam in front of or behind the existing dam

    • @thesneakinspider3193
      @thesneakinspider3193 3 роки тому +10

      There are plenty of dam removal videos here on youtube, they can give you a sense of how the smaller ones are taken care of and it seems some commenters already got to the larger ones.

    • @nicolasbousquet7463
      @nicolasbousquet7463 3 роки тому +1

      it's not that simple, beside the simple economics "dams are damn expensive, and whern there is no damn there is no income from power generation" there is also water supply problem. hovver dam keep las vegas and a lot of other place afloat. if you empty the hoover dam tto make a new one, there will be a shortage of water for decades
      also, the colorado river is running out of water, hoover dam get less water every year and so is lake powell behind glen canyon dam, so having a new lake to refill in those condition is absurd
      (just to state how much water you need to fill a lake: lake powell filling took 20 years and got full to the top only once in 1982

  • @jamesbizs
    @jamesbizs 3 роки тому +125

    Something about a fire hydrant being underwater, I find funny lol

    • @MegaBCAD
      @MegaBCAD 3 роки тому +14

      The most dangerous fires are on a boat that’s surrounded by water

    • @crazyeyez1502
      @crazyeyez1502 3 роки тому +16

      @@MegaBCAD or a submarine

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 3 роки тому +8

      there is a photo of a fire response to a house fire in a flood, where they are simply pumping up floodwater to fight the fire.

    • @gravelydon7072
      @gravelydon7072 3 роки тому +5

      If the hydrant in front of our home in Ohio was underwater, it wouldn't be funny. It would mean that the Ohio River was about to flood everywhere South to the Gulf of Mexico. We are above the flood plain of it by about 100 feet.

    • @alohathaxted
      @alohathaxted 3 роки тому +3

      Sort of like drowning fish.

  • @MisterNohbdy
    @MisterNohbdy 3 роки тому +1

    The teleporting water at 4:15 is strangely hypnotic.

  • @blueyesfaerie
    @blueyesfaerie 3 роки тому +1

    Got to witness this in action a few weeks ago! We have a number of flood management/risk management dams close to me, most of which I've visited under average circumstances. Over Christmas we had a rainstorm come through that dropped a few inches of rain and melted the remainder of the snow pile from a previous storm. One of the dams that usually has no reservoir behind it had 20 feet afterwards! It was remarkable to see and really illustrated the importance of those structures in that area.

  • @csours
    @csours 3 роки тому +13

    I've visited the Onion Creek neighborhood here in Austin, and it's kind of freaky to see the aftermath of a flood buyout program.

    • @TheAndyLittle
      @TheAndyLittle 3 роки тому

      I made a wrong turn and ended up driving through there. Surreal.

  • @DFSqu
    @DFSqu 3 роки тому +3

    I appreciate your interest, passion, and presentation of topics like this (and all your videos really). I like learning about things like flood control, but I've never gone out of my way to learn more about them. Thanks for what you do.

  • @jonathanbaker1961
    @jonathanbaker1961 3 роки тому +2

    For those of you wondering, at 5:16 that diversion channel is in Worcester, Massachusetts

  • @jackgriffiths4199
    @jackgriffiths4199 3 роки тому +4

    I love this channel. I may be biased as a Civil Engineer, but this may be the best channel on UA-cam. Thanks for all the hard work and high quality content!

  • @DanHiteshew-oneandonly
    @DanHiteshew-oneandonly 3 роки тому +3

    The new approach of increasing absorption rather than allowing run off is a promising one.
    Love all your vids. Keep them coming!

  • @FuncleChuck
    @FuncleChuck 3 роки тому +115

    I feel smarter already.

    • @ieuanhunt552
      @ieuanhunt552 3 роки тому +7

      @@truneighborhoodwatchtnw2127 you beat me to it

    • @jameslaw165
      @jameslaw165 3 роки тому +1

      Uu

    • @goodtoshi
      @goodtoshi 3 роки тому

      Imagine what will happen if you subscribe for Nebula

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 3 роки тому +2

      What the heck, i feel stupider

    • @getchasome6230
      @getchasome6230 3 роки тому

      Issa flood of information 🤔🤣

  • @angelaburton7741
    @angelaburton7741 2 роки тому +2

    Got a flood protection ad before the video about how flood control structures work.

  • @nicotti
    @nicotti 3 роки тому +2

    One of the most interesting flood mitigation strategies I've seen a dam do: One particular super rainy season the reservoir had filled almost to the tops of the spillway gates. So they opened all the gates to raise the flood pool for the whole lake an extra 4'. The lake is several 100 acres, so that's a lot of extra flood water storage.

    • @iamdave84
      @iamdave84 3 роки тому

      We had a super rainy season in Dec 2010 - Jan 2011 and the dam operators left it too long before releasing any water. The end result was a much worse flood downstream than should have been. So much so that the flood victims won a class action against the dam operators for negligence.
      amp.abc.net.au/article/11745632

  • @mango9087
    @mango9087 3 роки тому +6

    I really like the idea of "resiliency". Me any my hippy friends talk about "living with the land", but resiliency sounds like a practical, empirical measurement of how much an area is "living with the land".
    Im starting to think I need to go to school for engineering...

    • @mango9087
      @mango9087 3 роки тому +1

      @Mr Brightside Well you misunderstand the term, from what I gathered from the video.

    • @Turtle1631991
      @Turtle1631991 3 роки тому

      Isn't that very close to "redundancy" - the idea that you overdesign for extreme events and unlikely failures in proportion to criticality of the system?
      Those concepts can be applied anywhere. We can see it right now that businesses without liquid reserves for rainy day are failing due to lockdowns...

  • @alihassan389
    @alihassan389 3 роки тому +8

    It's great to see that linking between this video and my hydrology course 😅
    Thank you 💝

  • @RealHypeFox
    @RealHypeFox 3 роки тому +2

    The tone and cadence always puts me at ease. Continue making great things! Sending love from north of the Red. 🌪

  • @TenzaBurabura
    @TenzaBurabura 3 роки тому +1

    That is the best definition of a water shed I have ever heard, thank you!

  • @StrokeMahEgo
    @StrokeMahEgo 3 роки тому +7

    When you see a cool-looking concrete flood control structure:
    *DAM!*

  • @pawesedrowski6743
    @pawesedrowski6743 3 роки тому +6

    Great video, however I believe you missed the most efective flood control structures - so called small retention. A lot of small hand made wooden structures located upstream or on drainage ditches can stop and slow down the water and prevent overfilling of the rivers downstream. Beavers are also good at that. Natural grasslands and forest keep a lot of water too - if we destroy them the water rushes to the rivers and then overfills them. Maybe you could make a video about that? It would be really interesting to see your point on that. :-)

    • @banksarenotyourfriends
      @banksarenotyourfriends 3 роки тому +1

      Right! I was waiting for the part where he explained that planting trees upstream can protect cities downstream by increasing the infiltration of water into the land and slowing flow, instead of trying to get it off the land as quickly as possible. I guess it doesn't count as engineering...!

    • @pawesedrowski6743
      @pawesedrowski6743 3 роки тому +1

      @@banksarenotyourfriends Well, let's be honest a forest or some tree trunks across a stream or a ditch don't look as spectacular as an enormous dam. Most people have a tendency find those as unnecessary or even harmful. Even a lot of hydro engineers would like to plan rivers flow with a ruller and cement the riverbeds to make the water flow faster and they are not able to predict that it will cause problems downstream. I was really hoping that Grady (@Practical Engineering) would at least mention that as he has a really big audience and he could make more people aware.

    • @LucarioBoricua
      @LucarioBoricua 3 роки тому

      There's also detention ponds, which use a concept similar to the flood control dam, but at a much smaller scale and intended to mitigate the impact of really intense rainstorms in small basins/watersheds, such as those formed in urban areas (neighborhoods, parking lots, shopping malls, factory/warehouse buildings...)

    • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
      @PracticalEngineeringChannel  3 роки тому

      I did a video on urban stormwater management that talks about some of these smaller solutions. This video was really meant to talk about the three main types of large-scale flood control structures.

  • @arthurcarlson2855
    @arthurcarlson2855 3 роки тому +1

    Amarillo TX something I have found is that the more parking lots that are close together cause major flash flooding. Personally I would suggest that any new development or rebuilding of these lots should require either a holding pond or tanks under pr around the lot that connects to public storm drains and that the release of these storage systems are in part or fully managed by the drainage department. We have 2 creeks that feed the Canadian river, and one called timber creek south of town used by the city of canyon that is probably to far to use reasonably. We already use Amarillo and cherry creek's for the largest part of north Amarillo and large pits for the rest of which some get pumped to the creek but most don't.

  • @Peregrineeagle
    @Peregrineeagle 3 роки тому

    Love the discussion of Resilience, it's such an important development in planning. I'm currently working on my master's Architecture thesis on how historic structures can fit into resilient systems in coastal areas at risk from sea level rise, so it's great to see such a succinct and clear explanation of why resilience is important!

  • @DerykRobosson
    @DerykRobosson 3 роки тому +72

    When flood control was mentioned, what immediately came to mind was, "Nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed."

    • @EggBastion
      @EggBastion 3 роки тому +1

      That's a good quote!
      Google says Francis Bacon
      like I believe it anymore

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 3 роки тому +5

      @@johnsmith1474 real boomer moment

  • @timsmig8809
    @timsmig8809 3 роки тому +4

    You always improve my knowledge. Thank you 🙏🏻 😊

  • @daniels4742
    @daniels4742 3 роки тому +2

    I love these videos you make about water and the incredible work needed to control it. I learn alot!

  • @VijayabalajiB
    @VijayabalajiB 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks for high quality, informative videos like these. I always look forward to your uploads :)

  • @lunchboxproductions1183
    @lunchboxproductions1183 3 роки тому +5

    For some odd unknown reason I've been obsessed with hydrology since I was a little kid so all of these dihydrogen monoxide infrastructure videos lately are really tickling my fancy!!! Much appreciated

  • @subscribefornoreason1561
    @subscribefornoreason1561 3 роки тому +3

    I was almost on the edge of the Pontypridd flooding from I believe was 2019, I’m never sure of the year. It was devastating and one of the bridges as your leaving the area is still unstable to this day after the flood, a whole tree when into it! I do hope they have put in the correct flood control procedures now since it completely flooded the shopping centre up to the top of the doors... that’s almost 5 metres higher than the standard depth of that river which is only 1.5m at the deepest

  • @the0neskater
    @the0neskater 3 роки тому

    I have never clicked on ads on anything, especially on UA-cam but today I have broken that. Firstly to support your channel but also because the deal looks very good and the content looks excellent, exactly what I enjoy and want to watch. Thank you and great video / content!

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
    @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 3 роки тому

    Hey Grady! Happy new year! It's great to see another of your videos on as I wake up! 😁

  • @arpitamondal7539
    @arpitamondal7539 3 роки тому +3

    Hi Grady,
    I have personally benefitted a lot from your videos, and have been using some of your videos in my undergrad hydraulic engineering class in IIT Bombay, India. This is a request from me - can you make a video on decommissioning of dams? We teach a lot to our students on how to build dams but nothing at all about how old and dysfunctional dams may be decommissioned. As a matter of fact, there are hardly any dams decommissioned in India so far. It would be nice if you could share. Thanks a lot, and keep great content coming. Best wishes,
    Arpita

  • @Noah_AWICB
    @Noah_AWICB 3 роки тому +3

    These videos are always interesting, thank you

  • @kylo_ben
    @kylo_ben 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks mate. Awesome stuff

  • @nov4rus579
    @nov4rus579 3 роки тому

    Over the years now I've realized why my local parks have big open fields that are sunken into the ground, other than a big open area to play and have soccer on, it's more like an ingenious idea. Open land for recreational use, but when it does rain, and its not often, those fields flood and connect to underground waterways. I never actually thought what would happen if those parks were never there until this video gave me more insight on the variety of flood control structures. Without those seemingly inconvenient fields to get in and out of my town would flood heavily each time it rained.

  • @crazyeyez1502
    @crazyeyez1502 3 роки тому +15

    Had this old Chevy. Drove down to the river for a picnic. surprisingly, the levy was dry.
    🤷🏻‍♂️😏

    • @jaysmith1408
      @jaysmith1408 3 роки тому +5

      When you got there, did you by chance notice what the good old boys were doing?

    • @iamdave84
      @iamdave84 3 роки тому +5

      They were drinking whisky and rye

    • @crazyeyez1502
      @crazyeyez1502 3 роки тому +3

      It was a long long time ago , but they were singing hard.

    • @TheOtherBill
      @TheOtherBill 3 роки тому

      Meanwhile, on the other bank, the banjos are syncopating.

  • @danielmatias3929
    @danielmatias3929 3 роки тому +6

    5:11 Porto, Portugal!!!!

    • @NenucooPT
      @NenucooPT 3 роки тому +1

      PORTUGAL CARALHOoo! Orgulho Portuense !

  • @tiffanysandmeier4753
    @tiffanysandmeier4753 2 роки тому

    Rapid Creek that flows through Rapid City, SD. A devastating flash flood killed several people in 1974 (I think). After the flood, most of the land that flooded by the creek was purchased by the city and turned into parks and other green space. Some commercial businesses were allowed to stay, but have issues getting permits to alter them.

  • @andyrogerson8964
    @andyrogerson8964 3 роки тому

    Awesome video...thanks!!!!! I will share with the whole family

  • @BlackDragonWitheHawk
    @BlackDragonWitheHawk 3 роки тому +11

    In Switzerland, at the lake of Thun in Thun they built a tunnel to help flood control, but it doesn't realy solve the problem, it just shifts it down river... to solve the problem humans would need to give the river space again to meander and or flood fields in it's original valley...
    Soo... no more floods in the lake of Thun, but now they have a higher chance of flooding in the lake of Biel or the city of Bern

  • @spicybaguette7706
    @spicybaguette7706 3 роки тому +41

    Floods are also increasing because of the destruction of vegetation, which normally absorbs the water and releases it later on

    • @richarddrum9970
      @richarddrum9970 3 роки тому

      True, loss of vegetative cover results in increased runoff since trees and other vegetation absorb and transpire tons of water in forests. The other problem is the increased installation of pavements (roadways and parking lots) in urban areas that do not absorb much rainfall leading to more water in the stream or river that exceeds carrying capacity.

    • @amoth7757
      @amoth7757 3 роки тому +1

      Locally, giant housing plans have been deforesting swaths of land, but they also build on the adjacent flood plain, putting more and more strain on the watershed. Got rid of the forest, got rid of the wetlands, and put giant slabs of concrete down to funnel it away. Much of this has some sort of regulation that’s supposed to stop this but they unfortunately let people get away with empty promises, bribes, or the bare minimum (not future proof). Real sad shit to be seeing this destruction in real time :(

  • @richarddrum9970
    @richarddrum9970 3 роки тому +1

    Structural flood reduction measures can be effective if based upon accurate, historic hydrology and sound engineering and are especially good for protecting densely populated urban areas. Where development is less dense such as rural areas bordering waterways, non-structural measures (flood proofing and relocation) are much more effective and cost effective. Structural measures also require substantial, annual operation and maintenance costs to the local community whereas O&M costs for non-structural measures normally rests with the individual property owner. Great video.

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 2 роки тому +1

    I woke up to 3-4 ft of water in my neighborhood one day. The night before it rained harder than I thought was possible dropping feet of rain in a matter of hours and while there was definitely pooling, the water channeled in from the surrounding area over the next few hours after the rain stopped, was awful, had to get rescued by a boat.

  • @shaka626
    @shaka626 3 роки тому +8

    I just graduated as a Civil Engineer from University of UA-cam. 😂. Thanks for the video P.E

    • @jxmai7687
      @jxmai7687 3 роки тому +2

      don't forget put that into your resume.

  • @DAUKGinjaNinja
    @DAUKGinjaNinja 3 роки тому +3

    This video wasn’t available on Nebula yet so had to watch it here. Would prefer to watch on Nebula. Great vid anyways. Thank you.

    • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
      @PracticalEngineeringChannel  3 роки тому

      Sorry about the mixup! I usually have my videos on Nebula the day before they are released on UA-cam, but there was an error with the upload that had to be fixed. It's up now!

  • @jankubat2694
    @jankubat2694 3 роки тому +1

    I'd almost say, that's Orlík Dam in the Czech rep at 7:15
    I have seen it "in action" managing the flood (1000 year water) in 2002. Even opening the floodgates wasn't enough and the water overflowed the crown of the dam, it was terrifying.

    • @jankubat2694
      @jankubat2694 3 роки тому

      Watching some other aerials, it most certainly is Orlík.

  • @elementalsigil
    @elementalsigil 3 роки тому

    Another great video. I'm sure in practice the stuff contained in this video is beyond boring to any but the most driven floodiphiles. Thanks for making it so we can all enjoy it.

  • @engineermerasmus2810
    @engineermerasmus2810 3 роки тому +563

    Me who lives on top a of a hill: Pathetic

    • @lamcho00
      @lamcho00 3 роки тому +173

      Wait until the landslide episode.

    • @klyderain8817
      @klyderain8817 3 роки тому +56

      that one tectonic plate:
      "Im about to bring down this man's whole career."

    • @johanlugthart7782
      @johanlugthart7782 3 роки тому +23

      Me living a few meters below sealevel...

    • @nicolasbousquet7463
      @nicolasbousquet7463 3 роки тому +2

      me who live near a gigantic natural lake with a dam regulated level: hold my beer (haha , flood?)

    • @Ostsol
      @Ostsol 3 роки тому +2

      Our river lies in a valley up to a hundred-fifty feet deep. There are low-lying regions of the city, but the bulk of it is on high ground. The only flooding we get is due to drainage issues, mostly in underpasses.

  • @The_Hairy_Farmer
    @The_Hairy_Farmer 3 роки тому +5

    As farmers we've gone from Tick Eradication to Tick Control.......to Tick Management....

  • @typrus6377
    @typrus6377 3 роки тому +1

    For the reservoir example, look into the Estes Park Dam and the 2 major Big Thompson floods.

  • @TheSpidyfan
    @TheSpidyfan 3 роки тому +2

    I love everything you create. You have really inspired me to keep going! Thank you

  • @opensourceguy730
    @opensourceguy730 3 роки тому +26

    I remember the late Arthur C. Clarke saying that we shouldn’t call our planet Planet Earth, but Planet Water since most of it is covered with H2O. 🌏

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 роки тому

      If you want to really be accurate, the Earth is covered with a mix of mostly nitrogen and oxygen. By mass, there's an awful lot more rock/earth than there is water though (Even if you only count the rock in solid form).

    • @youammay3118
      @youammay3118 3 роки тому

      What about the other layers that are inside the planet?

    • @opensourceguy730
      @opensourceguy730 3 роки тому +2

      Ok, so I should have been more precise in what I wrote and said the surface area of the planet is mostly covered with water. :)

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 роки тому +1

      @@youammay3118 The other internal layers aren't covering the planet though... :-D

    • @youammay3118
      @youammay3118 3 роки тому

      @@peglor Well noticed ! Thanks dude :D

  • @peterfireflylund
    @peterfireflylund 3 роки тому +3

    No, a watershed is the *border between* drainage basins.

    • @9HighFlyer9
      @9HighFlyer9 3 роки тому

      Nope, it's the area not the border. The border doesn't shed water the land does. Thus, it's the watershed.

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund 3 роки тому

      @@9HighFlyer9 You must be American.
      Anyway, your folk etymology is wrong, both for the noun “watershed” and for the verb “to shed”.
      You can see the real etymologies on wiktionary.
      (Hint: there is a reason the German word is Wasserscheide.)

    • @9HighFlyer9
      @9HighFlyer9 3 роки тому

      @@peterfireflylund You must be German. My etymology was kind of tongue in cheek, sorry. You may be correct as to the origin and historical usage of the word. However in American English "watershed" refers to the land area that drains into a stream or river. "Divide" is the word I'm familiar with for the boundary of a watershed.

  • @DamnJuhl
    @DamnJuhl 3 роки тому

    There's a subtle change about this video that I appreciate. In a past video you mention property before lives and in this video you mention the importance of lives before the importance of property and I know it's small but I appreciate this framing better.

  • @Turtle1631991
    @Turtle1631991 3 роки тому

    This makes me think back to horrible floods we had in Czech Republic in 2002.
    In southern part of the country there is ingenious system of ponds and fisheries from 16th and 17th century built on what was originally marches.
    During those floods this system was able to withhold many dozens of millions of cubic meters of water without significant failure in 400 year old engineering while at the same time some much more modern damn experienced such failures. Always makes me appreciate just how important this work is and proud history of it.
    Not to mention Holland where they have to constantly pump water out since they are quite a bit under sea level. It is quite freaky when you walk up that damn and then from the top you can see that sea actually is higher then where you climbed from...

  • @LordWiggle
    @LordWiggle 3 роки тому +5

    You should check out the Dutch Delta works. You'll going to love it.

  • @ethanwild3301
    @ethanwild3301 3 роки тому +14

    *Me who lives in Houston: you guys don't flood out all the time?*

    • @PeterLawton
      @PeterLawton 3 роки тому

      Ha, ha! I will never forget when I saw the replay of Hurricane Irma: it went over Houston (bad), slowly (worse), then stopped and backed up over Houston (much worse), slowly (OMG Bad!), then stopped again and went forward over Houston a third time (WTF!), slowly. I thought, "NO WONDER it flooded!".

    • @Jake9066
      @Jake9066 3 роки тому +1

      I used to live in Houston... watched a car be carried down Kirby by floodwater back in 2013 (I think) back when they were ironically increasing the capacity of the storm drains

    • @ethanwild3301
      @ethanwild3301 3 роки тому

      @@Jake9066 That must've been crazy to watch.
      Yeah every time it rain for a while I always see all the drains get instantly clogged

  • @sagealyxander
    @sagealyxander 3 роки тому

    thank you so much for captioning these videos!!

  • @baronoke5432
    @baronoke5432 3 роки тому

    Thank you for the video. Your explanations were thorough, simple, and easy to understand.

  • @PfunkNH
    @PfunkNH 3 роки тому +55

    "don't feel like it cant happen to you." I live on top of a mountain I think I'm alright lmao

    • @gus473
      @gus473 3 роки тому +23

      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Landslide, down to flood level, seems possible!

    • @PfunkNH
      @PfunkNH 3 роки тому +7

      @@gus473 all granite

    • @ProfessorPesca
      @ProfessorPesca 3 роки тому +10

      Even mountains can suffer from surface water flooding.

    • @PeterM_K
      @PeterM_K 3 роки тому +1

      I'm Dutch...

    • @gus473
      @gus473 3 роки тому +2

      @@PfunkNH Didn't NH's famous "Old Man of the Mountain" just break off and crash to the ground a few years back....? 🤔 Just sayin'....! ✌🏼

  • @Itsthefry69
    @Itsthefry69 3 роки тому +4

    Science.

  • @danelen
    @danelen 2 роки тому

    These videos are so informative and well presented. Great explanations, simulations and visuals!

  • @CordCrenshaw
    @CordCrenshaw 3 роки тому

    I just want to know how you get the lighting so good in your studio. I can’t even see the lights reflected in your glasses. That’s some engineering magic! 🪄

  • @mrxmry3264
    @mrxmry3264 3 роки тому +8

    the problem with levees is that all they do is shift the problem downstream.

    • @Gruncival
      @Gruncival 3 роки тому

      That can be okay if downstream is a natural habitat that can absorb and return from the overbanking water. But yes, it's been a big issue when there's a community every 10 miles along the same river as is common in human history.

  • @GuyNamedSean
    @GuyNamedSean 3 роки тому +8

    Me, who lives in Houston:
    Snow pack? What's a snow pack?

    • @owensilberg2966
      @owensilberg2966 3 роки тому

      Was 2017 the last year it actually snowed here?

  • @laernulienlaernulienlaernu8953
    @laernulienlaernulienlaernu8953 2 роки тому

    On a site a long time ago, a guy who was tanking out a basement said to me - you can't stop water, you can only try and control where it goes. Very true.

  • @willhikearizona
    @willhikearizona 3 роки тому +1

    I was in Houston during hurricane Harvey and the flooding started a couple days after the rains had stopped and the reason I was told was because they had to release water from the levees upstream to prevent them overtopping. Would be an interesting video to discuss this event specifically.

  • @mistrants2745
    @mistrants2745 3 роки тому +16

    8:07 this is a rather American view. In the USA they seem to be rather focussed on fixing things back up after floods while kinda accepting they will always happen.
    This does not have to be the truth though. The Netherlands being a prime example of flood control done right.

    • @TedSchoenling
      @TedSchoenling 3 роки тому +2

      Spoken like somebody who has never seen the vast area of the US and doesn't realize that many of our states are larger than the Netherlands and have different non-coastal flooding requirements.

    • @nemodl
      @nemodl 3 роки тому +1

      @@TedSchoenling Fair point with regards to the size difference! Though Netherlands is also doing a lot of river management, seeing how it is located in the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta...

    • @vsmoraes0
      @vsmoraes0 3 роки тому

      Netherlands' land reclamation projects are extremmely environmental damaging. If such projects started with the knowledge we have today, they'd not even be accepted.

    • @tubester4567
      @tubester4567 3 роки тому

      @@TedSchoenling I agree, the cost involved in the US compared to the Netherlands is huge. The US is like 5000 Netherlands in size.

    • @mistrants2745
      @mistrants2745 3 роки тому

      @@TedSchoenling the netherlands is one giant floodplane. The ocean isnt the only concern.

  • @mfaizsyahmi
    @mfaizsyahmi 3 роки тому +1

    I would argue that the ability to control flooding is a hallmark of human civilization. Ancient Egypt and ancient China, among many other riverine settlements, got a big boost when they started building levees and irrigation channels, which reduce flooding and increase agriculture yield.
    One downside of levees is that siltation will eventually make the river bed actually higher than the surrounding floodplain, making flooding of the latter even more severe as there is no easy drainage against gravity. You should see a cross section of the Yellow River in the alluvial pan area. The difference between river bed and plains level is astonishing.

    • @Lunavii_Cellest
      @Lunavii_Cellest 3 роки тому

      What the netherlands is doing with levees is destroy them and rebuild them a lot of meters away from the river so if there is a lot of water i can flood the parts with nothing on it and it leaves the important parts dry

  • @mccutcheogeoff
    @mccutcheogeoff 3 роки тому

    A great example of flood control infrastructure from my home town is Red River Floodway. the 2nd largest earth moving project in the world when it was built. it is a massive ditch that diverts flood water from the red river around the city of winnipeg.

  • @user-mt3en9ly5d
    @user-mt3en9ly5d 3 роки тому +3

    "If you haven't, be careful in thinking it can't happen to you"
    *laughs from the top of a hill*

    • @electronx5594
      @electronx5594 3 роки тому

      You just need to wait,
      For the water level to reach you

    • @user-mt3en9ly5d
      @user-mt3en9ly5d 3 роки тому

      @@electronx5594 dude I live ~160m above sea level up the side of a gorge that funnels directly into the sea.
      If the water reaches me, then shit's gotten real dire.

  • @oogrooq
    @oogrooq 3 роки тому +3

    If it keeps on rainin', levee's goin' to break
    When the levee breaks, I'll have no place to stay.

  • @AobatrozFilms
    @AobatrozFilms 3 роки тому +1

    Hey Grady, I love your videos!
    Idea for a video (if you haven't done): I'd like to know how is the junction of a dam and its mountain. Is the concrete glued direct on the rock? Is there insulation to avoid leaks, is there another structures to reinforce the junction etc.
    Thank you so much!

  • @BWOWombat
    @BWOWombat 3 роки тому

    sooooooo nice to see you back!!!! literally love and always look forward to your videos!!

  • @gabrielgomescunha
    @gabrielgomescunha 3 роки тому +9

    Not building in flood areas would solve the problem

    • @lordkapuze9496
      @lordkapuze9496 3 роки тому

      I think you will find that it's almost impossible to build in a non-flood area. or at least these areas ithink are hard to find.

    • @Stormcrow_1
      @Stormcrow_1 3 роки тому +1

      Depending on the size of the country you might well find it's a case of too many people, and not enough places that don't flood.

    • @tymoteuszkazubski2755
      @tymoteuszkazubski2755 3 роки тому

      Where I live people settled in flooding areas for a long time, they built their houses on mounds and put U-shaped levies around their fields to protect them from flooding damage. It allowed sediment to settle and fertilize their fields.

    • @gabrielgomescunha
      @gabrielgomescunha 3 роки тому

      @@lordkapuze9496 try Switzerland, or where I'm from originally, North of Portugal or look for any populated mountainous regions. It's not difficult just not convenient. We humans are lazy. We could also build houses on pillars of the ground or on stilts or floating homes it's all better than having all your live washed away every time the river farts

    • @gabrielgomescunha
      @gabrielgomescunha 3 роки тому

      @@Stormcrow_1 you would be surprised on how wrong you arr

  • @acwright
    @acwright 3 роки тому +16

    There is a serious problem with this video that you need to address.
    It ends too soon.

  • @tokuchitou9193
    @tokuchitou9193 3 роки тому +1

    Happy New year 2021 sir, always a great pleasure to watch your videos. Best and precise information.

  • @dmc_xenon2411
    @dmc_xenon2411 2 роки тому

    Your channel is amazing! Enjoyed every episode I watched. I feel like I learn a lot and enjoy it at the same time even though I have no background in engineering. Thank you so much.

  • @tristanc6967
    @tristanc6967 3 роки тому +3

    "Flood Control Structures" is a verbose way of referring to Halo rings. Anyway, their purpose is to remove the galaxy of all sentient life.

  • @jaydee2100
    @jaydee2100 3 роки тому +4

    If only the German government was subsribed to your channel...

  • @Stephen-ie7uq
    @Stephen-ie7uq 3 роки тому

    Your videos and script are top shelf, Grady. Bravo!

  •  3 роки тому +1

    I confess that most days when I open UA-cam I just wish that Grady has made a new video. This channel is the best!

  • @Niendorf_an_der_Stecknitz
    @Niendorf_an_der_Stecknitz 3 роки тому +5

    "Nearly every major city us susceptible to floods"
    People living in mountainous areas : You dare underestimate me mortal?
    Landslides : Yes.

  • @merelyChirs
    @merelyChirs 3 роки тому +4

    But why does the intro sound like a sales pitch?

  • @johnwyatt8345
    @johnwyatt8345 Рік тому +2

    Thanks a lot for sharing the information. I was making a model on GeoHECRAS by CivilGEO and this came in handy.

  • @Pythonian7
    @Pythonian7 3 роки тому +1

    4:12 I took my Chevy to there, but was saddened to find it dry