ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Strengthening the Resiliency of a Coastal Transportation System through Integrated Simulation of Storm Surge, Inundation, and Nonrecurrent Congestion in Northeast Florida

Justin R. Davis    
Vladimir A. Paramygin    
Chrysafis Vogiatzis    
Y. Peter Sheng    
Panos M. Pardalos and Renato J. Figueiredo    

Resumen

The Multimodal Transportation Educational Virtual Appliance (MTEVA) is an application developed within the framework of the broader Coastal Science Educational Virtual Appliance (CSEVA) to enhance coastal resiliency through the integration of coastal science and transportation congestion models for emergency situations. The first generation MTEVA enabled users to perform and visualize simulations using an integrated storm surge and inundation model (CH3D-SSMS) and transportation evacuation/return modeling system that supports contraflow in a simple synthetic domain (order of tens of intersections/roads) under tropical storm conditions. In this study, the second generation MTEVA has been advanced to apply storm surge and evacuation models to the greater Jacksonville area of Northeast Florida (order tens of thousands of transportation intersections/roads). To support solving the evacuation problem with a significantly larger transportation network, new models have been developed, including a heuristic capable of efficiently solving large-scale problems. After initial testing on several smaller stand-alone transportation networks (e.g., Anaheim, Winnipeg), the heuristic is applied to the Jacksonville area transportation network. Results presented show the heuristic produces a nearly optimal (average optimality gap <0.5%) solution in 90% less wall clock time than needed by the exact solver. The MTEVA?s new capabilities are then demonstrated through the simulation of a Hurricane Katrina-sized storm impacting the region and studying how the evacuation patterns are affected by the closing of roads due to flooding and bridges due to high winds. To ensure residents are able to leave the area, evacuations are shown to need to have begun at least 36 h prior to landfall. Additionally it was shown that large numbers of residents would be left behind if evacuation does not begin within 18 h of landfall and ~97% would not escape if evacuation did not begin until landfall, when areas of the coast that are the most prone to flooding are already cut off from the ?safe? nodes of the transportation network.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Xia Yang, Xuegang (Jeff) Ban, John Mitchell     Pág. 1038 - 1058
Modeling emergency evacuation could help reduce losses and damages from disasters. In this paper, based on the system optimum principle, we develop a multimodal evacuation model that considers multiple transportation modes and their interactions, and cap... ver más

 
Oren E. Nahum, Yuval Hadas, Riccardo Rossi, Massimiliano Gastaldi, Gregorio Gecchele     Pág. 489 - 498
Nepal earthquake, have shown the need for quick response evacuation and assistance routes. Evacuation routes are, mostly, based on the capacities of the roads network. However, in extreme cases, such as earthquakes, roads network infrastructure may adver... ver más

 
Oren E. Nahum, Yuval Hadas, Mariano Zanini, Carlo Pellegrino, ... Massimiliano Gastaldi     Pág. 728 - 735
Natural and man-created disasters, such as hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, accidents and terrorist attacks, require evacuation and assistance routes. Evacuation routes are mostly based on the capacities of the road network. However, in extreme cases, ... ver más

 
Robert Bertini, Haizhong Wang, Tony Knudson, Kevin Carstens     Pág. 447 - 458
Safety remains a problem on U.S. roadways, with more than 32,000 fatalities, 2.2 million injuries and 6 million crashes each year. Travelers, shippers and the economy are exposed to increasing amounts of congestion, unreliability, delay, emissions and ex... ver más