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Engineering With Nature CSTORM Modeling Toolkit

June 20, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Research Update: Innovative Sensor Deployment to Save New Jersey Wetlands
June 11, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Network for Engineering With Nature (N-EWN) Inaugural Partner’s Symposium
May 23, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
New Book Showcases Nature-Based Solutions Around the World
April 25, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Advancing Nature-Based Solutions: A Key Focus for US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
April 24, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Surveying Beneficial Use of Dredged Material Placement Sites at the Philadelphia District
April 17, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Signed: A New Memorandum of Understanding with the National Institute of Standards and Technology to Collaboratively Quantify Nature’s Benefits for Human Well-Being
April 2, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
EWN Podcast reaches 50k download milestone!!!
April 1, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Join ERDC Live this week with EWN's Dr. King & Dr. Tritinger
March 26, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
National Nature Assessment Chapter Leadership Team Announced
March 25, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
EWN Bolsters Army Resilience Efforts

Project Information

USACE Districts require a method for predicting the impact that Engineering With Nature (EWN) features may have on the coastal resiliency of communities, quantifying changes to predicted values of storm surge, inundation, and wave attenuation for various storm events (i.e. 1/100, or 1/1000) if these features were implemented. Presently, numerical modeling of EWN features requires manual integration into the bathymetry/mesh, entailing a high level of skill and a significant time commitment. Each time the feature is altered, mesh must be rebuilt. Consequently, a limited set of NNBF measures will be implemented numerically for a subset of storm conditions and those effects will be extrapolated to other study regions, increasing the uncertainty of the study conclusions. The purpose of this project is to include a toolkit to create and permutate EWN features within the Coastal STORM – Modeling System (CSTORM-MS) of numerical models (ADCIRC/STWAVE), allowing Districts to look at variations of design parameters for varying NNBFs without having to modify model bathymetry every time, leading to a significant time and cost savings.

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Point of Contact

Research Mathematician, Coastal and Hydraulics Laboratory, ERDC

Deputy Program Manager, USACE EWN Program

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Scotch Bonnet, NJ – Researchers from the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center’s Coastal and...
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