Rainfall Overlay

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What is the rainfall overlay

The rainfall overlay is a grid overlay, which calculates where and how water would flow in situations where severe rainfall takes place. It does so by simulating water falling onto the 3D world over the course of thousands of steps. During each step, water can, among other things, land on the ground, flow over the surface, infiltrate into the ground, flow underground, and end up in surface water.

By repeating these simulation steps thousands of times, the influx and flows of water are accurately approximated.

What can the rainfall overlay be used for

The rainfall overlay is currently fit for simulating the flow and effects of severe rainfall on flat or mildly hilly areas, for map sizes of up to 5km. Larger maps, or calculations which involve an impulse of water such as levee breaches are not yet recommended.

The overlay can be configured to display various results of the simulated rainfall. For example it is possible to see the maximum amount of water certain locations had to endure, or the amount of water which has flowed across certain locations.

Adding and removing the overlay

The rainfall overlay consists of several overlays or result types that show different analyses of the area after or during the extreme rainfall. The overlay can therefore be added to the project multiple times, to present different outcomes or different scenarios. For information on adding and removing the overlay to and from the project, see the page on overlays in general. These result types can be chosen via the Result type box or in the last step of the Rain overlay wizard. Below they are listed and explained.

Result types

  • BASE_GROUNDWATER_DISTANCE: this overlay shows the distance between the groundwater level (obtained from the water area level data/ GxG map (*) and the surface level. For now, the height of the ground level is including the buildings and other objects on the ground (the height to the surface). This will be changed to the terrain height in a following release.
  • BASE_TYPES: from this overlay the division of the grid cells in water, land or sewer areas. Playing with the grid cell size, will make this division more or less accurate. This overlay is one of the inputs for the calculation of the flooding.
  • EVAPORATED: shows how much water is evaporated after the rainfall in the drying period (*) For more information on how this layer is calculated, see the Rainfall overlay calculationspage.
  • SEWER_LAST_VALUE: The amount of water remaining in the sewer after the simulation is over
  • SEWER_MAX_VALUE: The largest amount of water that was in the sewer at any time during the simulation
  • SURFACE_DURATION: The total amount of time the surface has water on it
  • SURFACE_FLOW: The total amount of water which has flowed across the surface
  • SURFACE_LAST_VALUE: The amount of water remaining on the surface after the simulation is over
  • SURFACE_MAX_VALUE: The largest amount of water that was on the surface at any time during the simulation. Differs from WATER_STRESS in that water stored on bodies of water is always included.
  • UNDERGROUND_FLOW: The total amount of water which has flowed underground
  • UNDERGROUND_LAST_VALUE: the amount of water which has flowed underground after the rain simulation is over.
  • UNDERGROUND_MAX_VALUE: the largest amount of water that flowed underground at any time during the simulation
  • WATER_STRESS: The maximum amount of excess water at any time during the simulation. Differs from SURFACE_MAX_VALUE because water stored on bodies of water are not immediately deemed "excess", this depends on the threshold value which can be defined in the last step of the Rain overlay wizard. If the amount of water exceeds this threshold value, the amount of water is visible on the water bodies.

Configuring the overlay

The overlay can be configured to add additional data and adjust various values to change or enhance the way the calculations are made and make the model more reliable it calculates. The overlay itself contains a number of attributes which can be configured. Attributes in other parts of the project, such as the connected rain definition, buildings, terrains, and areas defining water level areas. To guide the user along these configurations, the rain overlay wizard can be used. The rain overlay wizard is a wizard (link naar wizard) which guides the user along several steps where it is possible to add your own data.

Rain overlay Wizard

Data required

No data is explicitly required. The overlay is designed to provide initial calculations based on default values and minimal assumptions. However, the model can be refined with your own data:

The wizard exists of several steps. First you start with configuring the rainfall. The third step is adding the water level areas.

Water level areas

Here you can add your own dataset of "level areas" with a set water level. This file is loaded in as a geojson file as areas. The following attributed are needed for the calculations.

Attribute Description Example Remark
NAME The name of the water level area. PG 256 This attribute is not loaded in as attribute, but can be used as name to identify the resulting area in the Engine later on.
WATER_LEVEL The height of the water, in meters, measured from Amsterdam Ordnance Datum (mNAP). 1.6 For a water level area with infinite storage, this can be set to an extreme negative number (e.g. -9999). However, note that this would also place this area far below level areas with a proper height set.
OUTLET The amount of water which disappears from this level area in cubic meters per second (m3/s). 0.007 This could also be the outlet of a gemaal

If you do not have any water level dataset, you can also generate a water level area. This will create one waterlevel area which covers the entire 3D world, with no OUTLET value and a WATER_LEVEL of -1000. In the wizard the attributes which contain values for the water level and outlet need to be set. If they have different names, these can be chosen in the select attribute table.

The next step asks for the weir dataset.

Weirs

The weirs form connections between water level areas for the water to flow from higher water level areas to lower water level areas. The weir dataset is also loaded in as a geojson file. The following attributes need to be present.

Attribute Description Example Remark
NAME The name of the weir. PG 256 This attribute is not loaded in as attribute, but can be used as name to identify the resulting contruction in the Engine later on.
WEIR_HEIGHT_M The height of the weir, in meters, measured from Amsterdam Ordnance Datum (mNAP). 1.8 When using this model outside of the Netherlands, the height is in the same scale as the Terrain height of the project. When an extreme negative value is used, the construction acts like a culvert.
WEIR_SPEED The speed at which water is moved from one level area to the other, in cubic meters per second (m3/s). 0.007 Once the water level exceeds the height of the weir, the water flows at this constant speed until the water level no longer exceeds the height of the weir.

This file is loaded in as constructions. For now, the underground construction drainage system can be used. This will be updated with a construction resembling a weir in the future.

If no weirs exist, there are no connections between water level areas and water is not transferred between them.

Weirs must overlap with at most 2 water level areas. If a weir overlaps with more that 2 water level areas, 2 areas are selected at random which the weir pumps between. If a weir overlaps with only 1 water level area, only its outlet function is processed. Weirs which do not overlap with any water level areas have no effect.

Ground Water

In step 5 of the wizard a raster file with ground water levels can be added. By default the ground water level of the water level areas is used. If you choose for the option to upload a GeoTiff file, you can add you own GxG map or use one of the already created GxG maps.

Sewers

The next step allows for the sewer areas to be uploaded. The file is loaded in as a geojson file as areas. The following attributes are needed:

Attribute Description Example Remark
NAME The name of the sewer. Sewer North-East This attribute is not loaded in as attribute, but can be used as name to identify the resulting area in the Engine later on.
SEWER_PUMP_SPEED The speed at which water is pumped out of the sewer, in cubic meters per hour (m3/h). 1 All areas which are not plots of this kind should either not have PERCEEL as an attribute, or should have it set to 0(*).
SEWER_STORAGE The amount of water which can be stored in this sewer, in meters (m). 0.007 The total amount of storage for this sewer is the surface area of the polygon representing this sewer, times this attribute.

If you do not have a sewer area dataset, you can generate these areas. This is based on the CBS neighborhoods data (link) which contain an urbanization factor (link). This factor is an categorization for neighborhoods based on the number of addresses per square kilometre. This factor is a number in the range from 1 - 5, where a lower number refers to a more urban area. The number provided, selects the neighborhoods with that value or lower to the provided value. If no sewers exist, the model has no water flowing into sewer containers for storage.

Reference values terrains

In the next steps of the wizard the following reference values can be changed, regarding the surface and the underground terrain.

  • Water infiltration (m per day): the speed in which the water can infiltrate the underground. The speed is also determined by the underground water infiltration factor. From these two values, the lowest value is used.
  • Water manning: the Gauckler Manning coefficient, often denoted as n, is an empirically derived coefficient, which is dependent on many factors, including surface roughness and sinuosity.
  • Water evaporation factor: this factor will be multiplied with the general reference evaporation.
  • Reference Evaporation (mm per day): The Makking reference evaporation factor. This value ranges from 0.5 mm per day in the winter till 3 mm per day in the summer for the weather station ‘ De Bilt’ in the Netherlands.
  • Water storage fraction: the percentage of underground volume that can be used for the storage of water. This number is determined by the difference between the ground water level and the surface height times the surface area.
  • Vertical to horizontal infiltration factor: The factor is the multiply factor to obtain the horizontal infiltration speed from the vertical infiltration speed. The speed which water moves horizontally underground is currently derived from the speed in which water infiltrates vertically.

Reference values constructions

Also reference values for the constructions in the 3D world can be altered, since buildings can also store water. For example when they have a green roof and influence the ground infiltration. In the Function values table

Warnings

* To calculate the correct flow use a grid size of max 2m.
* Use a hi-detail height map (1 point per 0.5m), select hi detail in the New Area Wizard under advanced options.