16th International Conference on Urban Drainage 2024
9-14 June
9-14 June
Welcome to the 16th International Conference on Urban Drainage and Delft, The Netherlands.
This year’s conference is addressing a wide range of topics of direct interest to academics and practitioners working in the field of urban drainage. The focus is on complex and interdisciplinary challenges in these systems related to management, sustainability, climate change adaptation, socio-economic and other aspects. The aim is to present the latest advances and innovations in both fundamental and applied research related to these and other topics.
We received over 360 extended abstracts / papers that will be presented, in either a oral or flash presentation, in 5 parallel sessions during five conference days. A total of posters will also be presented during the conference. Each day will have a dedicated keynote lecture delivered by international experts. The conference will be attended by over 470 registered delegates from around 60 different countries, from all five continents. Selected conference
Jeroen Langeveld Co-Chair ICUD and associate professor Urban Drainagepapers will be invited for publication in the Water Science and Technology journal.
We will be giving away few awards too! The Poul Harremoës award will be given for the best urban drainage paper by a young water professional and the JCUD Mid-Career Achievement and Career Achievement awards will be given for internationally recognised contributions to the same field. The winners will be announced during the conference dinner.
We organised excursions to local facilities in Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Gouda, and several other places, so that you can get a glimpse into specific challenges of Dutch urban drainage systems. You could also attend some of our workshops, play the flooding game or learn more about the source control technologies and other things.
Finally, when you have some free time, we suggest visiting the historical centre of Delft, it will definitely be worth the effort.
Enjoy the conference!
Zoran Kapelan Co-Chair ICUD and Professor Urban Water InfrastructureJob van der
Werf ICUD Organising Committee Member, Assistant Professor Urban Water SystemsThis week we are guests in Delft, capital of the local water authority Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland. The Netherlands and water are inseparable. But strong dikes, clean surface water and wastewater effluent are important requirements for a safe environment. At the Delfland Water Board we take care of the quality and quantity of natural waters to ensure that all the residents of our area can live, work, and relax in this beautiful watery environment. HH Delfland uses the latest innovations to ensure the most efficient management of the wastewater cycle and (urban) water quality, always looking at state-of-the-art solutions to the many challenges that arise in the lowest parts of The Netherlands.
Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland
Regional water authority
PIETER JANSSEN ( CEO )Pieter Janssen is CEO of Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland (regional water authority around Delft, the Hague and Rotterdam). He will give a short introduction to water management in this region and the challenges the region faces. As an organization Delfland has been responsible for water management in this region for the past 735 years. Research and innovation are absolutely essential for a sustainable development of the region.
Wi-Fi (only valid on 10 - 14 juni 2024)
1 Text (SMS) ICUD2024 to phone number 7873 (or sms to +316 3574 4774)
2 You will immediately receive a return SMS containing your personal Wi-Fi username and password
3 Select the eduroam Wi-Fi network on your device and enter your username and password. You are now online!
Aula of the Delft University of Technology (TU Delft campus) Mekelweg 5 2628 CD Delft, The Netherlands
Find all detailed information about ICUD2024 also on our mobile website: program-icud2024.iwcconferences.com
You can organise your own meetings. Please contact the welcome desk to book a room.
TU Delft Campus is well accessible by bicycle, public transport and car. Check the website of the TU Delft how to get there: www.tudelftcampus.nl/accessibility
Hasselt Room
Committee Room 3
Committee Room 2
Second floor
Lecture Room A
Room C
lunch/coffee and meet the partners
Auditorium Ground
First floor
Prof. Peter Steen Mikkelsen, the winner of the JCUD mid-career Award in 2014, is professor at the Department of Environmental and Resource Engineering at the Technical University of Denmark. He has a strong track record in research related to understanding, engineering and integrated management of urban water with emphasis on stormwater, pollution and flood control, modelling and risk assessment of dynamic systems, and the role of uncertainty in modelling and decision making. He will discuss key developments in urban drainage over de past decades and highlight future directions of the urban drainage field.
Wendy Francken is the president of the European Water Association and Vlario, the knowledge platform for urban water in Flanders. She will present her vision for the future of the management of urban runoff using the implications and challenges of the new European Directive as the main thread of the story.
PROF. DR. DAVID MCCARTHYProf. Dr. David McCarthy, the winner of the Mid-Career Award of the previous edition of the ICUD and current chair of the JCUD, will reflect on the vital role that urban drainage managers have played in managing the COVID-19 pandamic through wastewater based epidemiology. He will set out the future of WBE and will reflect on the potential of low-cost sensing.
Dr. Lena Mutzner is a group leader at the Urban Water Management department at EAWAG. She is on the forefront of research in quantifying emerging pollutants in urban stormwater and their dynamics in grey and blue-green infrastructure. In her keynote she will paint a picture of the rapidly evolving future of stormwater quality research.
Prof. Dr. Michael Templeton, Professor of Public Health Engineering at Imperial College London and the Oxfam and Water For People / Royal Academy of Engineering Research Chair in Global Sanitation Technology, has dedicated his research to ensuring sustainable sanitation and clean water in least-developed and lower-middle income countries where non-sewered sanitation is often key. He will give his vision on the research needs and directions to achieve sustainable and equitable (waste)water management around the globe and how this involves developments in the urban drainage field.
1,01
1,02
Mezzanine level first and second floor
Obtaining rainfall data from Commercial Microwave Links in Nigeria, Africa
Droste, Overeem, Bogerd, Leijnse, Walraven, Tricarico, Priebe, and Uijlenhoet
Weather radar and IoT sensor networks: which information from which source?
Einfalt, Jahnke-Bornemann, Jasper-Tönnies, Kupzig, Neumann, and Oppel
1,03 Monitoring hydrologic performance and evapotranspiration of four experimental green roofs: first results after 16 months
Bertrand-Krajewski, Martins Masso, Krøyer Johnsen, Choi, Deplette, Paraz, Bonneau, Vacherie, Poncet, Perier-Camby, and Grimard
1,04 Monitoring and modelling overland and detention tank flow for a sewer-disconnected neighborhood in Denmark
Randall, Støvring, Buttinger-Kreuzhuber, Waser, and Meyer
1,05 Historical Storm Events as an Alternative to Design Storms for Water Sensitive Urban Design
Hess, Erskine, and Traver
1,06 Future IDF and short-duration rainfall characteristics of Tier I Urban Conglomerates vis-à-vis those across mainland India
Paul and Goswami
1,07 Assessment of the Impact of Climate Change on China’s Water Cycle Based on Dynamic Downscaling
Zhou and Dong
1,08 Laboratory-scale analysis of road-deposited sediment wash-off: Runoff scenarios under high sediment loads
Zafra, Hernández, Suárez, Naves, and Anta
1,09 Challenges and opportunities in predicting urban pollutant loads and discharge concentrations from surface-scale to city-scale
Charters, Cochrane, Chakravarthy, and Shipton
1,10 An event-based model for small microplastic (<100 µm) loads from highway runoffInvestigating structural and input uncertainties
Rosso, Corami, and Vezzaro
1,11 CFD Modeling of particle movement in a stormwater pump station
Hong, Huang, Liu, Zhu, Zeng, Yang, Chen, and Cai
1,12
Interception efficiency caculation method of inverted trapezoid curb opening
Wang, Yu, and Peng
1,13 Using SFIV technique to analyse flow distribution of flow under surcharge condition of grated inlets
Tellez-Alvarez and Russo
1,14 Flood risk mapping on poorly gauged through spatial analysis - A case study of São Paulo
Fava, da Silva, Mendiondo, and Delbem
1,15 Assessment and Improvement on Urban Flood Resilience of Green-Grey-Blue Facility
Yin and Jia
1,16 Towards a warning system for the microbiological quality assessment of bathing waters: high-frequency monitoring combined with hydrodynamic modelling
Angelotti, Guillot–Le Goff, Leitão Rosa, Carmigniani, Malardé, and Vinçon-Leite
1,17 Prediction of the effectiveness of blue-green infrastructure to mitigate combined sewers overflows in a Canadian metropolis
Bel Yaagoubi, Petrucci, Gougeon, Jalbert, Dorner, and Bichai
1,18 Evaluation of green and grey infrastructures for runoff and pollutant reduction
Martínez, Sánchez, and Vojinovic
1,19 Optimizing urban drainage systems in a tropical climate for TSS and COD reduction using low impact development (LID) controls
Cruz, Mendova, and Maniquiz-Redillas
1,20 The fault in our trees: an analysis of selected green infrastructure
Bahrami, Roghani, Tscheikner-Gratl, and Møller Rokstad
1,21 Studies of Hydraulic Performance on No Vegetation and Fringing Vegetation
Distributions in Surface Flow Constructed Wetlands
Idris, Chua, Mustaffa, Das, and Takaijudin
1,22 Enhancing the Theoretical Realism of the Flow Modeling for Sponge-like Porous Bodies on Permeable Soil During Rain Events
Barcot, Larsson, and Lundy
1,23 Urbanization Impact and LID Strategies in Erosion Prevention in a Residential Area in Brasília, Brazil.
Borges Barros, Leite Costa, and Koide
1,24 Evaluating the Total Suspended Solids (TSS) Reduction of Compact Bioretention Systems in Different Climate Zones
Nazarpour, Drake, Gnecco, and Palla
1,25 Evaluation of filter media performance in urban constructed wetlands for multifaceted purposes
Vispo, Geronimo, Robles, Oh, and Kim
Monday - Wednesday
1,26 A review on the role of media in anammox-based bioretention systems treating wastewater
Srivastava, McCarthy, Deletic, and Wijesiri
1,27 Adsorptive removal of Cu2+ and Zn2+ from highway runoff by using alum sludge in a Permeable Reactive Barrier System
Wu, Thornton, and Jensen
1,28 Web-based interactive identification tool for critical source areas of urban diffuse pollution
Joseph, Haacke, Kluge, and Paton
1,29 Estimation of Deterioration Heterogeneity in Sewerage Connection Pipes with Bias
Correction Due to Data Missing
Yamanaka, Abe, Kawamoto, Sasai, and Kaito
1,30 Intelligent Surface and underground: WaterGridSense 4.0, Sensor networks for Water management, Results
Sommer, Jakobs, Stremmel, Schenderlein, Skwarek, Kaven, Giutronich, Berlinski, Geldenhuis, and Thamsen
1,31
Smart actuator unit to control stormwater runoff from small sub-catchments
Kändler, Annus, and Kaur
1,32 Scalable model simplification for hydrodynamic sewer system models
Schütze, de Matos, Schmidt, and Alex
1,33 The development of a volumetric-balance SuDS performance evaluation tool, and its application to a case study site in Trondheim, Norway
Kellagher, Woods-Ballard, Gorton, McGrath, and Muthanna
1,34 Digital Based Solution for the Reduction of Pollution sent to the Receiving Waters from Urban Drainage and Sanitation Systems: Madrid Case Study. Lastra, Carrasco, Ortega, Botello, Sunyer, and Villanueva
1,35 Machine Learning Predictive Modelling for Sediment Risk Indices within an Urbanized River Channel
Pimiento, Anta, and Torres
1,36 Spatial and temporal variability in bioswale infiltration rate observed during full scale infiltration tests. Case Study: Riga Latvia
Kondratenko, Boogaard, Rubulis, and Maļinovskis
1,37 Assessment of Inspection Techniques for Rising Mains
Beenen, Scheperboer, Schellart, Gillar, and Naismith
1,38 Sewer networks asset lifespan prediction: adapting machine learning techniques to fit the purpose
Masoumzadeh Sayyar, Laakso, and Kummu
1,39 Modelling the hydro-climatic response of the Nantes metropolitan area
Betou, Chancibault, Ruas, Gaume, and Mosset
1,40 Comparing performances of an original parsimonious hydraulic-hydrological model with a traditional model for nature-based solution implementation.
Lenormand, Nunes, Boizeau, Pueyo-Ros, Montoya Coronado, Tedoldi, Comas, and Lipeme Kouyi
2,01 The Fresnel Platform: Improving Urban Resilience in the Greater Paris Area through the Multi-Hydro Model
Drouen, Schertzer, Gires, and Tchiguirinskaia
2,02 Economic Regulation of Urban Drainage: Mapping Urban Typology can influence consumption of service
Lima and Alves
2,03 Strategic Prioritization of Sewersheds to Mitigate Overflows under Climate Change
Petrucci, McQuaid, Jalbert, Dorner, and Bichai
2,04 Strategies for Identifying Key Variables in Urban Planning for Implementing Sustainable Drainage Systems in Public Areas
Suárez Castillo, Sañudo-Fontaneda, and Roces-García
2,05 Integration of Nature-based solutions in Urban Stormwater Management using Multi-objective Optimization Methods: A Scoping Review
Bista, Paus, and Seifert-Dähnn
2,06 Coordinating management of highly urbanized watersheds through a sensor enabled web application with real-time analysis
Tobias, Lynch, and Kerkez
2,07 Decision Support Tools of Sustainability Assessment for Urban Stormwater Management – a review of their roles in governance and management
Sun, Sjöman, Blecken, and Randrup
2,08 Can Distributed Water Infrastructure Enhance Resiliency to Urban Flooding Whilst Providing Beneficial Community Services?
Struck, Greene, and Sitterley
2,09 Inventing Solid Waste Clog-Resistant Open Drain for Enhanced Stormwater Conveyance and Flood Prevention
Chandrasena, Mustaffa, Mahasinghe, Mustafa, and Yusof
2,10 Brickmaking using urban river sedimentation: Effect of heavy metals immobilization and rainfall erosion
Shen, Jiang, Gao, Gan, Lu, Qian, Li, Liu, and Yang
2,11
Laboratory study of the hydrological response of Green Roofs with Expanded Clay and Crumb Rubber under extreme rainfall events
Andrés-Valeri, Lemos-Galindez, Lombillo, and Rodriguez-Hernandez
2,12
Rainfall - Runoff in the urban basin of the historical center of Ayacucho’s city - Perú
Oré and Kuroiwa
2,13 Numerical Simulation for the Assessment of the Efficiency of Residencial Infiltration Wells
Carvalho, Mendes, Pereira, Reis, Araujo, Vasco, and Formiga
2,14 Stormwater quality evaluation at riacho fundo urban catchment, Brasília, Brazil
Tsuji, Costa, and Koide
2,15 Hydrological modeling of sustainable urban drainage source control devices using SWMM and FEFLOW
Bigonha, Costa, Almeida, and Koide
2,16 Adaptation and Transfer of the Urban Water Balance Model ABIMO
Del Punta, Sonnenberg, Guericke, Kolesch, Haag, Schwab, and Matzinger
2,17
Effects of rainfall characteristics and ridge height on farmland runoff
Wang, Zhu, and Jiang
2,18 Impacts of Urban and Forseted Land Use on Runoff Quality: Implications for Improved Stormwater Management
Winston, Simpson, and Dorsey
2,19 The sensitivity of urban pluvial flooding to the temporal distribution of rainfall within design storms of the present and future
Asher, Trigg, Birch, and Boeing
2,20 Methodology for develop curves IDF in Urban areas: Case study Chiclayo -Peru
Bustamante and Mejia
2,21 Calibration of a soil water balance model for urban trees and derivation of characteristic values for irrigation
Syring, Schneider, Voigt, and Tränckner
2,22 ICARIA: Improving Climate Resilience of Critical Assets
de la Cruz Coronas and Russo
2,23 Urban Runoff Pollutant Dynamics and Settling Removal Characteristics in Multiple Storm Events
Seo and Kim
2,24 Debris retention upstream of culverts: pier structure optimisation through physical modelling
Giliomee and Loots
2,25 Verification of Safety Measures for Increased Pressure in Manhole due to Short Duration
Rainfall
Yamazaki, Otsuki, Nakamura, and Nishikawa
2,26 Never been to Nacala: assessing urban flood erosion from a distance
Huthoff, Bregoli, Ashafa, and Van der Kwast
2,27 Comprehensive Assessment of Flood Inundation Risks Across 336 Cities in China Utilizing Multiple Data
Li and Dong
2,28 Modified Risk Components on Urban Flood Analysis Based on Regulation: Study Case Gedebage Area, Bandung City
Nugroho, Sinayangsih, Kresnaufal, Soeharno, Harlan, Yuherdha, Pradoto, Yudhistira, and Riawan
2,29 Development of the 2D/1D Coupled S-RAT Model for Flooding Simulation Dual Drainage in watershed
Kim and Lee
2,30 Fast flood model for future pluvial flood management, a case study in Innsbruck, Austria
Hauser, Gholami Korzani, Deletic, and Kleidorfer
2,31 Pluvial flood damage cost analysis – Case study Trelleborg, Sweden
Mobini and Du
2,32 Evaluating storm water management facilities for flood risk reduction through Real-time modeling
Pujari and Wayal
2,33 Identification of flood-prone areas in a medium-sized city using the HAND model
Santos, Reis, and Formiga
2,34 Modelling the impact of Nature Based Solution on urban stormwater management in global changes perspective Application to two residential catchments in strasbourg municipality
Wang, Maurer, and Wanko Ngnien
2,35 The regional provision of Brazilian drainage and urban stormwater management service
Angelini-Sobrinha
2,36 Greenhouse gas emissions and future forecast in China’s Urban Wastewater sector
Jiang, Zhu, Wang and He
1,01
Mezzanine level first and second floor
Evaluating the flood responses and flood pattern of urban areas from different rainfall patterns
Skrede, Muthanna, and Alfredsen
1,02 Probabilistic nowcasting of urban pluvial flooding using surrogate inundation models
Buekenhout, Reinoso-Rondinel, and Willems
1,03 Flood Modelling as a Tool for Urban Drainage Planning in Ghana
Kodwiw, Agbelengor, and Keelson
1,04 Assessment of water erosion and sediment yield in a tropical urban catchment based on various land use types across three development periods using SWAT and MUSLE
San Pedro, Garbanzos, Antonio, Cayetano, and Maniquiz-Redillas
1,05 Integration of sustainable drainage systems (SuDS) to mitigate the impact of stormwater and wastewater overflows in the municipality of Chia, Colombia
Sarta, Angarita, and Montes
1,06 On-line measurement of the impact of combined sewer overflows in small waterbodies
Wissing, Mang, Petruck, and Sommerhäuser
1,07
The role of Green Roofs in stormwater runoff quantity - quality management and in thermal performance: the case study of Catania (Sicily, Italy)
Sciuto, Cascone, Licciardello, Scavera, Longo Minnolo, Barresi, Vanella, Consoli, and Cirelli
1,08 Stormwater control at source through rainwater harvesting - a success story from urban India
Sharma
1,09
Treatment wetlands as Nature-based Solutions for combined sewer overflow treatment: an overview of applications and recent trends
Tondera, Rizzo, Sarti, Portela, and Molle
1,10 Digital Transformation of Stormwater Treatment Plants in Urban Areas and Road
Transport Infrastructures: An Italian Case Study
Biondi, Eulogi, Sambo, and Favaro
1,11 How to make (advanced) processing of open data more accessible to non-programming domain expert? The example of a Smart Water data Management Platform (SWAMP)
Verbeiren, Demarest, Ngugi Ndung’u, Oeyen, Nicolay, and Demeuter
1,12
Influence of the growing medium in the modelling of rainfall and runoff on green roofs
Eugenio, Freni, and Sambito
1,13 Water as an Organising Principle in Climate Response: a collaborative work experience to share
Begley, Schertzer, and Tchiguirinskaia
1,14 Watershed and Integrated Water Resources Project Planning in South Orange County, California
Apt, Sharp, Rivers, Poresky, Zinn, and Shumaker
1,15 A radical reframing of the work of the hydrologist
Trowsdale
1,16 Feasibility methodology for selecting and locating urban Nature-based solutions considering socio-economic criteria.
Uribe-Aguado, Giraldo-Gonzalez, and Rodríguez Sánchez
1,17 Applying Digital Technologies in disadvantaged communities. Lessons learned from community engagement processes in Al Baqa’, Jordan
Trillo, Aburamadan, and Cotella
1,18 The Human Psychology of Rain Gardens in City Streets Ferguson
1,19 The sustainability of urban drainage in Brazil: a way forward or a way down the drain?
Mendes, dos Santos, and Alves
1,20 Preliminary insights on REST: Road and Environmental Safety Toolkit
Stanić, Prodanović, Jaćimović, Đukić, Randelović, and Stanić
1,21 Toward sustainable sewer networks: environmental impact assessment of pipe materials and renovation methods
Sitzenfrei Hajibabaei, Hesarkazzazi, Lima, Gschösser, and Sitzenfrei
1,22 Enhancing Bioretention Efficiency in Cold Climates: A Framework for Integrating Real-Time Monitoring and Machine Learning for Proactive Asset Management. Roghani, Paus, and Maletskyi
1,23 An Optimization-Simulation framework for Selecting Suitable Low Impact Development Measures at River Basin Scale
Subrahmanian, Arun, Narasimhan, and Bhallamudi
1,24 Applying IoT monitoring and early warning management to urban flood control adaptation plans
Yang, Leu, Kuo, Chen, and Yeh
1,25 The potential to manage Bacillus anthracis spores with bioretioen and high flow media filters: results from simulated runoff testing
Boening-Ulman, Mikelonis, Heckman, and Winston
1,26 Predicting wet-weather runoff to wastewater treatment plant with conceptual model using attenuation data from cellular network
Fencl and Bareš
Thursday and Friday
1,27 Multifractal comparison of three optical disdrometers and a mini vertically pointing Doppler radar, and consequences on rainfall extreme quantification in urban environment.
Gires, Santos de Souza, Jose, Schertzer, and Tchiguirinskaia
1,28 The role of evapotraspiration in the hydrologic restoration in different climatic contexts and for future climatic scenarios.
Palla, Grossi, Dada, Jabeen, Turco, Palermo, Piro, and Gnecco
1,29 Water Demand and Availability at Urban Tree Sites: Impact of Climate Change
Depending on Age and Tree Pit
Rosenberger, Leandro, Wood, and Helmreich
1,30 Quick scanning the extraneous water at a wastewater treatment plant.
Stegeman, Henckens, de Ridder, and Stapel
1,31 Assessment of daily pollutant accumulation rates on impervious surfaces in two seasons
Djukić, Lekić, Rajaković-Ognjanović, Naunovic, and Prodanović
1,32 Removal of persistence mobile and toxic contaminants from greywater for sustainable reuse in a phytoremediation experiment
Beral, Ma, Rodríguez-Mozaz, Buttiglieri, Radjenovic, and Comas
1,33 Results of a literature and mass balance study on trace substances within stormwater sewers and combined sewer overflows
Ertl, DeVito-Francesco, and Allabashi
1,34 A new model to evaluate stormwater runoff quality
Vinck and De Bock
1,35 From Pathogens to Pharmaceuticals: Expansion of surveillance in wastewater.
Madrid case of Study.
Lastra, Ortega, Botello, and Pinilla
1,36 OBSERVE - Wastewater as an indicator of population health
Serrano, Serra-Compte, Quina, Gonzalez, Reyes, Galofre, and Diaz
1,37 Experimental study on the particle-plate Collision in dropshafts
J. Liu, H. Liu, Huang, and Zhu
1,38 Are traditional faecal indicators accurately assessing the public health risks of urban floods?
Scutt, Shucksmith, Jensen, Diaz-Nieto, and Douterelo
1,39 Extreme Floods: 1D/2D Hydraulic Modeling with HEC-RAS and LiDAR
Pereira, Mendes, and Formiga
1,40 Predicting water quality in urban rivers: Linking high frequency monitoring and spatial rainfall
Guillot – Le Goff, Cartier, Carmigniani, Malardé, Saad, Dubois, Einfalt, and Vinçon-Leite
2,01 Comparing the hydrologic and water quality performance of bioretention and high rate biofiltration at a marina in Huron, Ohio, United States
Fast, Winston, Dorsey, and Feliciano
2,02 The functioning of water-storing roads in relation to groundwater
Schoonderbeek, Veldkamp, Kluck, and van der Lee
2,03 Design of suds for control and processing of streams with diffused channels in transportation and public space projects. Case study Bogotá
Fonseca, Aguilar, Gómez, Burgos, Arbeláez Segura, Ramírez Cely, Calle Bueno, Jiménez
Rocha, and Ruiz Rueda
2,04 Hydrologic performance of bioretention systems with unfavourable underground conditions: complementing field monitoring with simple reservoir modelling for scenario analysis
Huang, Sage, Técher, and Gromaire
2,05 Shallow-Media Bioretention Cells: A Hydrologic Case for Expanded Installation
Tormey, Ellis, and Hunt
2,06 Implementation of Nature-Based Solutions in Viet Nam, a case study in Da Nang
Huynh Thi Ngoc and Kleidorfer
2,07 Harvesting the storms in Cape Town, South Africa
Bonilla and Okedi
2,08 Per and poly-fluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) removal by a radial flow cartridge system
Dalrymple, Allingham, Wicks, Jones, and McDonald
2,09 Merging SuDS and treatment wetland knowledge for improving bioretention system design for stormwater water pollution control
Rizzo, Tondera, and Blecken
2,10 Retrofitting interventions with Sustainable urban Drainage Solutions for the hydraulic risk mitigation: the case study of Catania (Sicily, Italy)
Sciuto, Rizzo, Licciardello, Masi, Barbagallo, and Cirelli
2,11 Optimization Framework for Designing a Urban Road-Based Major Drainage System to Cope with Extreme Storms
Shao, Wei, and Gong
2,12 Expanding access to hydrologic data: Supporting local environmental initiatives with an open access API serving urban water data from a 160+ sensor network
Schmidt, Nie, Lynch, Tobias, Borg, Marchionda, and Kerkez
2,13 Integration of Eulerian and Lagrangian sensors for the rapid identification of contamination sources into the sewer system
Sambito and Freni
2,14 Identifying wetland weaknesses using high-spatial resolution and low-cost water quality sensing methods
Wang, Shi, Kolotelo, and McCarthy
2,15 ‘No Regrets’ Digital Solutions for reducing Overflow Spills
Taylor
2,16 Performance Analysis of Storm Sewer Network Simplify and Grid Resolution by Basin Scale
Sim and Kim
2,17 Analysis of water level data uncertainties on gradually varied flow estimation using DREAM and GLUE models
Reis, Santos, Silva, Mendes, Carvalho, and Formiga
2,18 Statistical and Machine Learning Models for Predicting Sediment Accumulation in an Urban River
Pimiento and Torres
2,19 Asset Management for Green Stormwater Infrastructure: Condition Scores and Long Term Performance
Spraakman, Sharma, Humes, and McManus
2,20 In-situ SUDS modelling
K. Fuchs, Lipeme Kouyi, and L. Fuchs
2,21 PumpLess: Tidal inflow assessment tool for coastal catchments
Hesarkazzazi, Kalaichelvam, and Taylor
2,22 Evaluation of EPA SWMM application in tropical green roof modelling
Gomes, Carvalho, and Moura
2,23 Enhancing resilience to urban flood events through ranking of assets in interdependent infrastructure networks
Chatzistefanou, Chen, Djordjevic, Vamvakeridou-Lyroudia, and Savic
2,24 How to stop reinventing the wheel in blue-green infrastructure planning? A spatial multi criteria analysis framework based on value-focused thinking
Lacroix, Kuller, Dagenais, and Bichai
2,25 The Synergy of Integrated Design: WSUD Research Findings for Improved Infrastructure
Sapdhare and Beecham
2,26 Estimation of Nitrogen Input in an urban eutrophic lake: N2O emissions in the Pampulha Reservoir (Brazil)
Neto, Pessoa, Silva, and Nascimento
2,27 Cost-benefit analysis of stormwater source control measures for urban stormwater management in highly urbanized areas
Solarte, Duchesne, Pelletier, and Torres
2,28 Role of Historical Systems and Societal Practices in Transforming Urban Drainage Systems: Case Study from Kerala, India
Lokhande, Krishnankutty, and Kalbar
2,29 Assessment of the sediment buildup and management in a tropical pre-developed environment
Garbanzos, Ty II, Belen, Bianes, and Maniquiz-Redillas
Sunday 9 June
Sunday 9 June
16:00 Pre-registration at welcome desk
16.30 Ice Breaker Event
- The ICUD2024 starts with an icebreaker to offer you a warm 19.00 welcome to Delft. The ice breaker provides you with the opportunity to meet with your peers and make new contacts in a relaxed atmosphere. We will provide drinks and bites, it’s up to you to benefit from the occasion and enjoy this social event while familiarising with the conference venue.
Auditorium
Conference Venue:
Aula of the Delft University of Technology (TU Delft campus) Mekelweg 5, 2628 CD Delft, The Netherlands
Monday 10 June
Monday 10 June
08:00 Registration at welcome desk
09.00 Opening session and first keynote (chaired by Zoran Kapelan)
Short introduction to Watermanagement in Delfland by Pieter Janssen, CEO of Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland
Short introduction to JCUD by prof. David McCarthy, chair of JCUD
Short introduction to ICUD2024 by Jeroen Langeveld, co-chair of ICUD2024
09.30 Keynote Prof.dr. Peter Steen Mikkelen (DTU Denmark)
Auditorium
See page 8
10.30 Coffee Break
11.00 Poul Harremoes Award Presentation
During the Poul Harremoes Award (PHA), three young career researchers who authered the highest rated papers on innovation, scientific soundsness and create new ideas will give their 20 minutes pitchs. After each pitch, questions will be asked and the young water professionals (YWPs) will be ranked on their pitch and answer to questions alike. the PHA will be awarded during the conference dinner. This year the three finalist are:
Travis Dantzer (University of Michigan): Tunable linear feedback control of urban drainage systems using models defined purely from data
Manuel Alberto Regueiro Picallo (University of A Coruna): Flow rate influence on sediment depth estimation using temperature sensors
Vincent Pons (NTNU): Embracing epistemic uncertainty: a risk evaluation method for pollutants in stormwater
Auditorium
12.30 Lunch
13.30
15.00 Poster Session 1 / Tea Break
16.00
17.30 Working Group Meetings / Young Water Professional Event
- See page 32
19.30
Monday 10 June 13:30
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Gromaire-Mertz and Almasalmeh
13:30
13:50
14:10
Avoiding an increase in combined sewer overflows in a future climate using blue-green infrastructure
Cavadini, Mayra Rodriguez and Lauren Cook
Proposal of a Multifunctional Urban Project Using Blue and Green Infrastructure to Mitigate Floods in a Sprawling Urban Area in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Cruz, Amback Aline Pires, Veról Marcelo Gomes Miguez
Watershed-Scale Green Infrastructure Reduces Heavy Metals in Runoff from Residential Catchments
Cruz, Amback, Veról, and Miguez
14:30
Holistic Hydrologic Benefits of Neighbourhood-scale Green Infrastructure
Implementation in Columbus, Ohio, USA
Tirpak, Boening-Ulman, Smith, Martin, and Winston
Flash Prediction of the effectiveness of blue-green infrastructure to mitigate combined sewers overflows in a Canadian metropolis
Bel Yaagoubi, Petrucci, Gougeon, Jalbert, Dorner and Bichai
Flash Evaluation of green and grey infrastructures for runoff and pollutant reduction
Martinez, Sanchez and Vojinovic.
Instrumentation, measurement and monitoring
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Anta and Pang 5.2a
13:30 A low-cost, in-situ, automated sensor for nitrate and ammonia.
Janmohammadi, Shi, and McCarthy
13:50 Assessing the utility of passive sampling for the monitoring of bacteria and protozoa in wastewater and surface water
Law, Becker, Parker, Weese, McCarthy, and Murphy
14:10 Monitoring sediment build-up in gully pots using temperature-based systems
Reguiero-Picallo, Fuchs, Rieckermann, Moreno-Rodenas and Clemens-Meyer.
14:30
Low-cost sensor networks to quantify the dynamics of suspended sediment yields in peri-urban areas
Ribeiro, Russell, Fletcher, Cherqui, Navratil and Cossart
Flash Estimation of Deterioration Heterogeneity in Sewerage Connection Pipes with Bias
Correction Due to Data Missing
Yamanaka, Abe, Kawamoto, Sasai, and Kaito
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Kandler and Cortes Moreno
13:30 Data- and model-based stormwater treatment concepts for heavily polluted areas using P-RTC
Böckmann, Altensell, Mika, and Hoppe
13:50 Combining Different Measures for Mitigating Combined Sewer Overflows in the Québec-Beauport system
Abasi, Schütze, Duchesne, and Pelletier
14:10 Identification of stormwater control strategies using Bayesian Optimization
Mullapudi and Kerkez
14:30 Real time control of stormwater constructed wetlands: the efficiency of outlet control
X. Shi, B. Shi, Zhang, Winfrey, Delgado, and McCarthy
Flash Smart actuator unit to control stormwater runoff from small sub-catchments
Kändler, Annus and Kaur
Sediment Characteristics and Transport
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Tait and Naves
13:30 Spatial and temporal distribution of organic matter and compounds in the sediments of the City of Paris sewerage system.
Asselin, Jacob, Thiebault, Bernier-Turpin and Moilleron
13:50 Towards an intensive understanding of sewer sediment prokaryotic community assembly and function
Yao, Xia, Yu, Lu, and Zhu
14:10 Experimental investigation of binary sediment in sewer pipes
Zhang, Zhu, and Chan
14:30 CFD Modeling of particle movement in a stormwater pump station
Hong, Huang, Liu, Zhu, Zeng, Yang, Chen, and Cai
Flash Interception efficiency calculation method of inverted trapezoid curb opening
Wang, Yu and Peng
Monday 10 June 13:30
Global Change Adaptation Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Okedi and Utkina
13:30 Design, construction and testing of a lab-scale city model for use in education in stormwater management
Paus, Weel, Telle, Nilsen, Roozbahani and Rydningen
13:50 Citizens Willingness to Embrace the Use of Industrial Waste in Porous Concrete Pavers: Preliminary Findings from the Ø-Waste-Water Project
Svetozarevic, Lekic, Govedarica, Savic, and Rajakovic-Ognjanovic
14:10 The water transition: Steps towards a future proof (waste)water system
Van Daal-Rombouts, Oomens and Weijers
14:30 Improving Urban Drainage Systems: The impact of Community of Practices
Verhaart, Tukker, van Meerkerk, and Clemens-Meyer
Flash Role of Historical Systems and Societal Practices in Transforming Urban Drainage Systems: Case Study from Kerala, India
Lokhande, Krishnankutty, and Kalbar
Flash Can Distributed Water Infrastructure Enhance Resiliency to Urban Flooding Whilst Providing Beneficial Community Services?
Struck, Greene and Sitterley
Monday 10 June 16:00
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Kleidorfer and Pons
16:00 Novel 1D/2D Coupled Hydraulic Solver for Flood Modelling in Urban Watersheds
Ardoin and Bartos
16:20 Fast data assimilation method for urban drainage model based on control theory
Milašinović, Vasilić, Stanić, Ivetić, and Prodanović
16:40 Fully automated simplification of urban drainage models on city scale
Pichler, König, Reinstaller, and Muschalla
Flash Scalable model simplification for hydrodynamic sewer system models
Schütze, de Matos, Schmidt and Alex
CSO Treatment Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Dittmer and Kamilya 4.3a
16:00 Influence of roof type, influent quality and treatment media type on the performance of a dissolved metals treatment system
Charters, Clarkson, Millar, Moss, Cochrane, and O’Sullivan
16:20 Evaluation of bioinfiltration systems amended with different sorbents to remove a wide range of contaminants from stormwater: Impacts of rainfall intensity and antecedent dry periods
Esfandiar, McKenzie, and Suri
16:40 Subsurface Gravel Wetland Systems, a flexible and adaptable stormwater innovation
Houle and Ballestero
17:00 Stormwater Treatment Systems in Organic Micropollutant Removal: Performance and Risk Assessment
Zheng, Shi, McCarthy, Deletic, Fletcher, Khan, Le Clech, Hancock, and Zha
Flash Evaluating the Total Suspended Solids (TSS) Reduction of Compact Bioretention Systems in Different Climate Zones
Nazarpour, Drake, Gnecco, and Palla
Flash Evaluation of filter media performance in urban constructed wetlands for multifaceted purposes
Vispo, Geronimo, Robles, Oh, Kim
Monday 10 June 16:00
Receiving Water Impacts
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Shepherd and Nolan
16:00 Long-term numerical analysis of fecal pollution caused by combined sewer overflows in the Odaiba coastal area of Tokyo using EcoPARI
Arii, Poopipattana, Furumai, and Hirot Higa
16:20 Combining multiple approaches to assess water quality in an urban ecosystem: the case of the ancient canals of Padua, Italy.
Faccin, Carrer, Smania, Palmeri, and Barausse.
16:40 Real-time monitoring of the GLUC activity in recreational waters: Does it give the whole picture?
Makris, Schilperoort, Hoefeijzers, Seelen, Jeroen Langeveld
17:00 Particle-associated Element Patterns: Effects of Stormwater Discharges in a Small Urban Stream
Rojas-Gomez, Benisch, Helm, Borchardt, and Krebs
Flash Towards a warning system for the microbiological quality assessment of bathing waters: high-frequency monitoring combined with hydrodynamic modelling
Angelotti, Guillot – Le Goff, Leitão Rosa, Carmigniani, Malardé, and Vinçon-Leite
Hydraulics of Urban Drainage Networks
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Shucksmith and Funke
16:00 Calculation of discharge coefficients with supercritical surface flow conditions and free surface to underground drainage flow
Kemper and Schlenkhoff
16:20 Numerical Simulation of Gas Bubble Size Distribution in Turbulent Flow
Li and Zhu
16:40 Implications of the spatial configuration of urban street inlets on drainage process
Liang and Guan
17:00 Air Flow Induced by Pumping Events in Sanitary Sewers
Wang, Zhu, and Steffler
Flash Using SFIV technique to analyse flow distribution of flow under surcharge condition of grated inlets
Tellez-Alvarez and Russo
Monday 10 June 16:00
Innovative Case Studies in Urban Drainage
Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Hathaway and Lokhande
16:00 Pollution-Weighted Model Predictive Control for Sewage Systems
Da Silva Gesser, Voos, Alex Cornelissen, and Schutz
16:20 Circular Economy Innovation in Urban Infrastructure: Harnessing the Power of Solidified WWTP Sludge in Porous Concrete Pavements for Flood-Resilient Cities
Govedarica, Karanović, Stanić, Škondrić, Lekić, and Rajaković-Ognjanović
16:40 An improved semi-analytical solution for determining water permeability of highly pervious porous materials
Stanić, Jaćimović, Govedarica, Lekić, Vasilić, and Randelović
17:00 Disaster Risk Reduction with Nature-Based Solutions: a Social Network Analysis
Veiga, Varanda, Galvão, and Ribeiro
Flash Inventing Solid Waste Clog-Resistant Open Drain for Enhanced Stormwater Conveyance and Flood Prevention
Chandrasena, Mustaffa, Mahasinghe, Ul Mustafa, and Yusof
Flash Brickmaking using urban river sedimentation: Effect of heavy metals immobilization and rainfall erosion
Shen, Jiang, Gao, Gan, Lu, Qian, Li, Liu, and Yang
On the Monday afternoon, there will be a Young Water Professional session as well as the meetings from the main working groups that are formed under the JCUD (Joint Committee Urban Drainage). All the sessions are open to participants interested in joining, working with or getting involved in other ways the various working groups. Below, an overview of the working groups is given. Registration for any of the sessions is not necessary.
YWP Session – Conveners: Baiqian Shi (Monash University), Pierre Lechevallier (Eawag), Kelsey Smyth (ENPC), Vincent Pons (NTNU) and Job van der Werf (TU Delft)
Senate Room / Senaatzaal
Part of longer project, the YWP session aims at forming a network of young water professionals (<35 or recently obtained PhD) in the urban drainage field. The aim of the session is to have a discussion on the future of urban drainage academia, which is part of an ongoing project aiming at co-writing a position paper from a YWP perspective.
International Working Group on Data and Models –Convener Joao Leitao (Eawag)
Commissiezaal 3 – Committee Room 3
The IWGDM, responsible for the organisation of the Urban Drainage Modelling conference, will meet to discuss the workings group future plans and continued contribution to the urban drainage field.
iBGi, formerly known as WSUD/SOCOMA – Convener Peter Bach (OST)
Commissiezaal 2 – Committee Room 2
The iBGi Working Group, reborn from the former WSUD/SOCOMA Working Group, continues a rich legacy of a global community centered around sustainable urban drainage systems. Increasingly referred to as Blue-Green Infrastructures (BGI), the practice has rapidly gained increasing attention (and labels) worldwide. Our goal is to build a global community and promote unified and accessible knowledge around contemporary BGI practices, especially in the face of climate change and challenges to sustainable urban drainage management.
Working Group Large Research Infrastructures – Convener Jose Anta Alvarez (University of Coruna)
Collegezaal A / Lecture Room A
The newly approved working group, on large research infrastructure, will have its first official meeting at this ICUD. A continuation from the well-known Co-UD Labs project, the WGLRI will discuss its vision for the coming years and hopes to establish a solid base with new participants.
Urban Streams – Convener: Haifeng Jia (Tsinghua University) Commissiekamer 4 / Committee Room 4
The urban streams working group will meet at ICUD in order to discuss their future plans and projects. All participants are welcome to join and discuss their points of view.
International Group on Urban Rainfall – Conveners: Thomas Einfalt (Hydro & Meteo GmbH) and Daniel Schertzer (ENPC) Van Hasseltzaal / Van Hasselt Room
IGUR, one of the oldest and most active working groups, will meet during this ICUD to discuss the plans for the coming years. Timing and topics of future meetings, including the ongoing IGUR publication project with the working title Rainfall-related Consequences of Climate Change on Applications for the Urban Populations.
International Working Group on Emerging Contaminants – Convener Lena Mutzner (Eawag) and Kefeng Zhang (University of New South Wales) Collegezaal D / Lecture Room D
The recently established working group on Emerging Contaminants will hold its first meeting at this ICUD. The aim of the meeting is to establish a network of researchers that are interested in the field of emerging contaminants in the urban drainage field. The aim is to set the agenda for the coming years, discuss aims, and future projects.
Tuesday 11 June
Tuesday 11 June
08:00 Registration at welcome desk
09.00 Parallel Sessions: 5.5a 4.1b 1.1a 3.1a 6.2a
10.30 Coffee Break
11.00 Parallel Sessions: 3.3a 1.4a 4.3b 5.4b 6.1a
12.30 Lunch
13.30 2nd keynote (chaired by Jeroen Langeveld) Keynote Wendy Francken
New European Legislation: Future Perspectives Auditorium
See page 8
14.30 Parallel Sessions: 4.1c 5.6a 2.2a 6.4a
16.00 Coffee Break
16.30 Parallel Sessions: 1.3a 5.2e 5.7a 2.1a 6.1b
18.00 Botanical Gardens Beer Tasting (beer + bites) - Hortus Botanicus TU Delft - Poortlandplein 6, 2628 BM Delft
20.00 See page 47
Tuesday 11 June 9.00
Artificial Intelligence in Urban Drainage
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Sansalone and Garzon Diaz
09:00 Generative AI for Climate-adaptive Cities and Blue-Green Infrastructures: promises and perils in the future co-pilot?
Bach and Prodanovic
09:20 Water Level Estimation in Sewage Pipes using Texture Based Methods and Machine Learning Algorithms
Bhase, Myrans, and Everson
09:40 Enhancing Combined Sewer Systems Modeling and Predictions through Physics-Lever aged Machine Learning
Bakhshipour, Sedki, Dilly, Hesarkazzazi, Oberascher, Sitzenfrei, Dittmer, Haghshenas, and Haghighi
10:00 Data-Driven Machine Learning approaches for prediction of failure events due to impaired drainage asset condition
Wu, Kazemi, Nichols, Tait, and Raja
Flash Based Solution for the Reduction of Pollution sent to the Receiving Waters from Urban Drainage and Sanitation Systems: Madrid Case Study.
Lastra, Carrasco Minquez, Ortega, Botello, Sunyer, and Villanueva
Flash Machine Learning Predictive Modelling for Sediment Risk Indices within an Urbanized River Channel
Pimiento, Anta, and Torres
Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Rieckermann and Schoonderbeek
09:00 Hydrologic Impacts of Retention Layers within Extensive Vegetated Roof Assemblies
Frizzi and Drake
09:20 Is crushed concrete a sustainble solution to the challenge of phosphorus retention in nature-based solutions? A column study.
Pitropova, Vollertsen, Andersen, Søborg, Storm, Aggerlund, and Raabjerg
09:40 Runoff volume reduction performance of a pervious detention basin located in a shallow groundwater and low-permeability soil context
Sage, Berthier, Payet, and Gallis
10:00 Reducing the Size of Stormwater Wetlands: A New Flow-Through Design Approach
Taguchi, Van Pelt, and Hunt III
Flash Optimizing urban drainage systems in a tropical climate for TSS and COD reduction using low impact development (LID) controls
Cruz, Maniquiz-Redillas, and Mendova
Urban Rainfall and Radar Measurement Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Cristiano and Bosco
09:00 The rain does not fall far from the tree: Field study on the impact of trees presence on bioretention functionnality and longevity
Lanoutte, Duchesne, Pelletier, and Grégoire
09:20 Nowcasting of high-intensity rainfall for urban applications in The Netherlands
Lin, Imhoff, Schleiss, and Uijlenhoet
09:40 Evaluation of Precipitation Forecasts by Numerical Weather Prediction for Potential Use in Urban Flood Forecasting: A Case Study in Japan
Shibuo
10:00 Predictors for uncertainty reduction in commercial microwave links quantitative precipi tation estimates
Špačková, Fencl and Bareš
Flash Multifractal comparison of three optical disdrometers and a mini vertically pointing Doppler radar, and consequences on rainfall extreme quantification in urban environment.
Gires, Santos de Souza, Jose, Schertzer, and Tchiguirinskaia
Flash Weather radar and IoT sensor networks: which information from which source?
Einfalt, Jahnke-Bornemann, Jasper-Tönnies, Kupzig, Neumann, and Oppel
Urban Floods Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Djordjevic and Fappiano
09:00 Experimental and numerical analysis of the hydraulic behavior of access stairs to underground spaces. The case study of the Paral·lel metro station in Barcelona. Aparicio, Russo, Tellez-Alvarez, and Pomares
09:20 A combined approach to evaluated integrated urban flood model Reinstaller and Muschalla
09:40 Porters Creek Wetland and Catchment Stormwater Modelling, Revegetation Plan and Monitoring Plan
van Megchelen and Phillips
Flash Flood risk mapping on poorly gauged through spatial analysis - A case study of São Paulo Fava, Fray da Silva, Mendiondo, and Botazzo Delbem
Flash Assessment and Improvement on Urban Flood Resilience of Green-Grey-Blue Facility
Jian and Dingkun
Integrated Urban Water Management Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Spraakman and Hastings
09:00 Surface energy and water fluxes are key to resilient urban design
Back, Bach, and Kleidorfer
09:20 Designing green infrastructure for multifunctionality
Cook, Good, Moretti, Kremer, Wadzuk, Traver, and Smith
09:40
10:00
Benefits of effective pre-screening on multi-objective optimization of Blue-green and Grey Infrastructures for urban stormwater management
Li, Leitão, Wang, and Bach
DRAIN Project: An Integrated Urban Drainage Model in QGIS with Iber-SWMM
Sañudo, García-Feal, Cea, Puertas, Sanz-Ramos, Bladé, Torret, Guzmán, Marques, Pi, and Pablo Romero
Flash Integration of Nature-based solutions in Urban Stormwater Management using Multi-objective Optimization Methods: A Scoping Review
Bista, Paus, and Seifert-Dähnn
Flash Coordinating management of highly urbanized watersheds through a sensor enabled web application with real-time analysis
Tobias, Lynch, and Kerkez
Tuesday 11 June 11.00
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Viklander and Roghani
11:00 Fingerprints of micropollutants: Analysing gradients along two urban streams
Benisch, Helm, Krauss, Amy Byrne, Becker, Mayer, Ahlheim, Brack, and Krebs
11:20
11:40
12:00
Uptake, translocation, transformation, and toxicity of contaminants of emerging concern in sedge (Carex praegracilis).
Beral, Ma, Rodríguez-Mozaz, Buttiglieri, Radjenovic, and Comas
Per and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in urban rivers affected by stormwater discharges
Kali, Österlund, Blecken, and Viklander
Coupling cross-scale modelling with SSP-RCP projections to investigate carbamazepine fates in rivers under climate change and urbanization
Wu, Yang, Kumar, Zhang, and Krebs
Accumulation and wash-off of pollutants
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Muthanna and Regueiro-Picallo
11:00 Tree Contributions to Coarse Organic Matter and Phosphorus in Urban Stormwater
Runoff
Chapman, Wilson, Pietsch, Finlay, and Baker
11:20 Is there enough water? Influence of soil moisture in the evaporative cooling of urban trees
Gobatti, Bach, Maurer, and Leitão
11:40 Understanding the influence of leaf litter on the water balance composition of blue-green infrastructure
Joshi, Naves, Anta, Maurer, and Leitão
12:00 Untreated stormwater quality improves over decadal time scales causing modeling inadequacies
Simpson, Winston, Hathaway, and Schwartz
Flash Laboratory-scale analysis of road-deposited sediment wash-off: Runoff scenarios under high sediment loads
Zafra, Hernández, Suárez, Naves, and Anta
CSO Treatment
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Kleidorfer and Stegeman
11:00 Review of design, operational conditions, and mathematical modeling of Anammox-based systems: A special emphasis on SNAD in soil-plant-based biofilters
Kamilya, Egodawatta, Deletic, Wijesiri, Kankanamalage, and McCarthy
11:20 Interaction of micropollutants and bacteria in a constructed wetland treating road runoff
Seidl, Roux, Bousserrhine, Branchu, and Gromaire
11:40 Hydrologic and Water Quality Performance of a Bioretention Cell Eight Years
Post-Construction
Winston, Patrick, and Tirpak
12:00 Removal of trace level organic chemicals from pre-treated wastewater in vegetated biofiltration systems
Yuan, Prodanovic, Deletic, and Zhang
Flash A review on the role of media in anammox-based bioretention systems treating wastewater
Srivastava, Deletic, McCarthy, and Wijesiri
Flash Adsorptive removal of Cu2+ and Zn2+ from highway runoff by using alum sludge in a Permeable Reactive Barrier System
Wu, Thronton and Jensen
5.4b
Model Development and Uncertainty Analysis
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Muschalla and Pritsis
11:00 The SWMM5+ hydraulic model for parallel finite-volume simulation of storm water networks
Hodges and Sharior
11:20 Are the models wrong? - Upscaling evaluation methods to an entire service area
Pedersen
11:40 Optimization of Volumetric Urban Drainage Units with a CFD-ML Model
Sansalone and Li
12:00
Combining physically - based and block model approaches for urban stormwater management systems: implications of flow in variably saturated media for the design and planning process.
Zeeh, Helm, Neidhart, and Gräber
Flash The development of a volumetric-balance SuDS performance evaluation tool, and its application to a case study site in Trondheim, Norway
Kellagher, Woods-Ballard, Gorton, McGrath, and Muthanna
Urban Planning
Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Sweetapple and Hauser
11:00 “Cool-Green D&D” - A digitalization and demonstration testbed for sponge city technology development and engagement
Bach, Rohr, Patrick, Baur, and Burkhardt
11:20 Investigating spatial relationships between blue-green infrastructures, urban heat and urban dwellers
Chen, Bach, Nice, and Leitão
11:40 Strategic planning of blue-green infrastructure to reduce surface water pollution from combined sewer overflows
Knoche, Schumacher, Zamzow, Sohrt, Rehfeld-Klein, Matzinger, Johne, Meier, Rouault, Pawlowsky-Reusing, and Schütz
12:00 A Multi-Objective Optimization Framework for Spatial Green Infrastructure Planning Under Climate Change
Liu, Kinouchi, Johnson, and Zhang
Flash The Fresnel Platform: Improving Urban Resilience in the Greater Paris Area through the Multi-Hydro Model
Drouen, Schertzer, Gires, and Tchiguirinskaia
Flash Economic Regulation of Urban Drainage: Mapping Urban Typology can influence consumption of service
Lima and Alves
Tuesday 11 June 14:30
Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Passeport and Smyth
14:30 Understanding the Performance and Affecting Factors of Stormwater Nature-based Solutions Application to Various Urban Catchments
Geronimo, Oh, Vispo, Enrico Robles, and Kim
14:50 Clogging Resistance of Porous Pavements and Investigation on the Effectivness of Various Cleansing Methods
Huang and Chui
15:10 Impacts of Media Composition, Vegetation Type, and Groundwater Interactions on Bioretention Cell Performance in Ohio, USA
Tirpak, Winston, Dorsey, and Grieser
15:30 Contribution of Green roofs to sponge cities in the context of climate change
Versini, Ramanathan, Sindt, Perrin, and Schertzer
Flash The fault in our trees: an analysis of selected green infrastructure
Bahrami, Roghani, Tscheikner-Gratl, and Møller Rokstad
Flash Studies of Hydraulic Performance on No Vegetation and Fringing Vegetation Distributions in Surface Flow Constructed Wetlands
Idris, Chua, Mustaffa, Das, and Takaijudin
Asset Management and Inspection Techniques
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Caradot and Tesfamariam
14:30 Investigation of hydraulic conductivity on permeable pavement bonded with a novel polyurethane binder
Alvarado, Wintgens, Linneman, García, Krebbers, and Otto
14:50 Leading the way to stormwater control measures asset management: how your research can feed ours!
Girot, Cherqui, Curt, Taillandier, Di Maiolo, Vanpeene, and Wittner
15:10 Assessing the temporal evolution of hydrodynamic properties of a filtration media in a stormwater bioretention swale by using continuous monitoring
Sandoval, Dubois, Saad, and Gromaire
15:30 But do they transfer – Sewer deterioration models in Norway
Tscheikner-Gratl, Skjelde, Daulat, Roghani, and Møller Rokstad
Flash Spatial and temporal variability in bioswale infiltration rate observed during full scale infiltration tests. Case Study: Riga Latvia
Kondratenko, Boogaard, Rubulis, and Maļinovskis
Tuesday 11 June 14:30
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Mutzner and Furrer
14:30 Stormwater bioretention: Occurrence and accumulation of metals, PAHs, PCBs, alkylphenols, phthalates, PFASs and microplastics
Furén, Flanagan, Österlund, Lange, Beryani, Winston, Tirpak, Dorsey, Smith, Viklander, and Blecken
14:50 Removal of Xenobiotic Organic Compounds (XOCs) from greywater using green walls
Abd-ur-Rehman, Zhang, Deletic, and Prodanovic
15:10 PFAS in urban stormwater runoff of industrial catchments
Wicke, Knoche, Matzinger, Zhiteneva, Miehe, Hensel, Rückbeil, and Sperlich
15:30 Emissions of micropollutants, antibiotic-resistent bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes from urban entry pathways
Wittmann, Beckers, Stiedl, Jacobs, Castronovo, Schüttler, Schulz, Reifferscheid, and Wick
Flash An event-based model for small microplastic (<100 µm) loads from highway runoffInvestigating structural and input uncertainties
Rosso, Corami, and Vezzaro
6.4a
14:30
Institutional Arrangements and Policies
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Freni and Solarte
Economics of Maintenance and Recovery of Urban Residuals for Nutrient Load Credits versus Structural Treatment Systems for Urban Drainage
Raje and Sansalone
14:50 Financing mechanisms for nature-based solutions used in stormwater management –a global mapping
Seifert-Dähnn, Furuseth, Fürst, and de Bruin
15:10 Barriers to integrating sustainable stormwater management in urban environments in Sweden
Sörensen and Hanson
15:30 Establishing Regulatory Effluent Concentrations and Runoff Fates for Stormwater
Control Measures in North Carolina, USA Using Research
Waickowski, Hunt, and D’Arconte
Flash Decision Support Tools of Sustainability Assessment for Urban Stormwater Management – a review of their roles in governance and management
Sun, Sjöman, Blecken, and Randrup
Co-UD Labs – Special Session
Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Jose Anta
Tuesday 11 June 16:30
Climate Change Impacts and Projects – Special Session
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Cook and Pons
16:30 A special session is organised by the chairs.
Cook and Pons
17:10
Balancing urban heat and water scarcity: The role of urban green space irrigation during compound drought-heatwave events
Back, Ambrosi, Funke, Leitinger, and Kleidorfer
17:30 Multiscaling Climate Networks
Thomas, Kurths, and Schertzer
Flash Historical Storm Events as an Alternative to Design Storms for Water Sensitive Urban Design*
Hess, Erskine, and Traver
Flash Future IDF and short-duration rainfall characteristics of Tier I Urban Conglomerates vis-à-vis those across mainland India
Paul and Goswami
Flash Assessment of the Impact of Climate Change on China’s Water Cycle Based on Dynamic Downscaling
Zhou and Dong
Instrumentation, measurement and monitoring
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Joksimovic and Ljubicic
16:30 BoSLcam: a IoT field-deployable camera to enable image-based water quality monitoring.
Catsamas, Shi, and McCarthy
16:50 Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD) monitoring with low-cost water level sensor in the Tropics
Ding, Hamel, Cherqui, Bertrand-Krajewski, Walcker, Encillo
17:10 Assessment of a low-cost sensor probe for monitoring runoff water quality in a storm tank (SUDS)
Mancipe and Beltran
17:30 Exploring online sensors as proxies for organic chemical dynamics in sewers during wet-weather
Waldner, Lechevallier, Maire, Singer, and Mutzner
Tuesday 11 June 16:30
Modelling of SuDS
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Blecken and Morvannou
16:30 Modelling green roof hydrologic performances under various conditions: geography, climate change scenarios, simulation time step
Bertrand-Krajewski, Angelini-Sobrinha, Pons, Bonneau, and Grimard
16:50 Parameterisation for hydrological modelling of blue-green infrastructures: A matter of spatial and temporal scale?
Hörnschemeyer, Henrichs, Dittmer, and Uhl
17:10
A Hybrid Modelling Approach for Urban Drainage Systems: Combining Data-driven and Mechanism-driven Methods
Huang and Dong
17:30 Modeling green roof performance in different climates.
Orsi, Funke, Back, Rauch, Kleidorfer, Crispino, and Gisonni
Flash Modelling the hydro-climatic response of the Nantes metropolitan area
Betou, Chancibault, Ruas, Gaume, and Mosset
Flash Comparing performances of an original parsimonious hydraulic-hydrological model with a traditional model for nature-based solution implementation.
Lenormand, Nunes, Boizeau, Pueyo-Ros, Montoya Coronado, Tedoldi, Comas, and Lipeme Kouyi
Pollutant Transport and Transformation
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Bernier-Turpin and Geronimo
16:30 Biological and Chemical H2S Oxidation Rates on Corroded Sewer Concrete: A New Determination Method
Huang, Yuan, and Zheng
16:50 Relevance of Methane Emissions from Stormwater Management
Morandi, Rovelli, Lorke, and Dittmer
17:10 Investigating sulfide formation in deep tunnel sewer systems: A simulation approach utilizing machine learning boosting models
Nguyen and Wu
17:30 Development of a fast and dynamic sewer airflow model
Li, Sharma, and Yuan
Flash Challenges and opportunities in predicting urban pollutant loads and discharge concentrations from surface-scale to city-scale
Charters, Cochrane, Chakravarthy, and Shipton
Tuesday 11 June 16:30
Urban Planning Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Houle and Liu
16:30 Climate Adaptation monitor using the ClimateScan toolbox: Adaptation-DNA of cities and national contribution of nature-based solutions to urban water storage.
Boogaard, Meijer, Lamers, Schaart, and Kondratenko
16:50 Exploring SuDS implementation in a landslide-prone catchment
Chin and Chui
17:10
SSANTO’s adolescence: exciting times in the life of a planning support system for nature-based solutions
Kuller, Lacroix, and Bichai
17:30 Stormwater management by urban trees: case of the SenseCity experimental device Zime Yerima, Seidl, Bensaoud, Berthier, and Gromaire
Flash Strategic Prioritization of Sewersheds to Mitigate Overflows under Climate Change
Petrucci, Jalbert, McQuaid, Dorner, and Bichai
Flash Strategies for Identifying Key Variables in Urban Planning for Implementing Sustainable Drainage Systems in Public Areas
Suárez Castillo, Sañudo Fontaneda, and Roces García
Tuesday 11 June 18.00 - 20.00
Hortus Botanicus TU Delft - Poortlandplein 6, 2628 BM Delft
Beer brewing and Delft have a long history. The first brewery settled in Delft in 1210, providing a tasteful but affordable drink to the both nobility (although they tended to prefer the more exotic wines) and the “Common Delftenaar”. By the 15th century, Delft counted over 200 small breweries and by 1550 Delft was the beer-capital of Holland. Beer from Delft was loved not only in Holland, but beyond the borders: this largely owing to the unique taste derived from the peaty water that was used in the brewing process.
The consequence of the reliance on clean water: the water stayed clean. Brewers in Delft were strongly represented in the city council and ensured that the water quality was sufficient through the making the connection of latrines to cesspits mandatory and banning any water-polluting industry. Additionally, pumps, gates and sluices were installed to protect the water quality.
Although Delft has losts it’s internationally leading position in beer brewering, plenty of smaller breweries still exist in the city. During the beer tasting, we will be sampling 5 beers from the Koperen Kat. These 5 mystery beers have been crafted locally in the vistable brewery. During the tasting, you will get to try these beers and if you can identify each correctly you might just win something special! The beer tasting itself will take place in the botanical gardens of the TU Delft: the Hortus Botanicus. Here we can enjoy the beers under exotic trees, next to an international collection of flowers and plants and hopefully under the famed Dutch afternoon-sun.
18 minutes walk
Wednesday 12 June
Wednesday 12 June
08:00 Registration at welcome desk
09.00 Parallel Sessions: 5.7b 4.2a 5.2b 1.2a 6.2b
10.30 Coffee Break
11.00 Parallel Sessions: 4.1d 1.4b 5.3b 5.6b 6.1c
12.30 Lunch
13.30 3rd Keynote (chaired by Job van der Werf) Keynote Prof. David McCarthy
Future of wastewater based epidemiology and low-cost sensing Auditorium
See page 8
14.30 Excursions and Sessions
- See page 56
18.30
Wednesday 12 June 9:00
9:00
Modelling of SuDS
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Stovin and Hornschemeyer
Modelling the potential stormwater quality improvement resulting from retrofitting SuDS in a large South African urban catchment
Armitage, Thewlis, and Reimers
9:20 Modelling of a tray-based modular blue roof in Mediterranean area
Gullotta and Campisano
9:40
Modelling hydraulics and fate of micropollutants in a variably saturated treatment
wetland for urban stormwater
Morvannou, Troesch, Gromaire, and Forquet
10:00
Analyzing the effectiveness of Blue and Green Infrastructures in urban environments using a fine-scale water balance model
Wu, Bezak, Radinja, Alivio, Mikoš, Dohnal, Bares, and Willems
Flash In-situ SUDS modelling
Fuchs, Kouyi, and Fuchs
Flash PumpLess: Tidal inflow assessment tool for coastal catchments
Hesarkazzazi, Kalaichelvam, and Taylor
4.2a
Rainwater and Greywater Harvesting
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Prodanovic and Flanagan
9:00 Exploring the Impact of Blue-Green Infrastructures on urban water demand.
Andrusenko, van der Hoek, and Langeveld
9:20 Benefits of grey water irrigated green roofs in urban environments
Helm, Reyes Silva, and Krebs
9:40 Towards a Complete Water Balance of a Constructed Wetland
McGauley and Wadzuk
10:00 Review of stormwater pathogen levels and treatment performance of Water Sensitive Urban Designs: Can the stormwater be safety harvested?
Zhu, Shi, Deletic, Fletcher, Khan, Le Clech,Hancock, Zhang, and McCarthy
Flash Optimizing Sensor Placement in Sewer Systems for Water Quality and Quantity
Estimation: A Data-Driven Approach
Bonilla and Okedi
Wednesday 12 June 9:00
Instrumentation, Measurement and Monitoring
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Moreno Rodenas and Regueiro-Picallo
9:00 Optimizing Sensor Placement in Sewer Systems for Water Quality and Quantity
Estimation: A Data-Driven Approach
Oh and Bartos
9:20 A picture is worth a thousand measurements: a low-cost camera-based sensor for in-situ particle size estimation
Pang, Shi, Catsamas, and McCarthy
9:40 Continious TSS Measurement in Stormwater Runoff by Ultrasound Multi-Frequency
Backscattering
Schmitz and Kibrom
10:00 Next generation monitoring protocols to improve the load estimation accuracy
Shi, Wang, Kolotelo, Westfall, Grey, Kemp, and McCarthy
Flash Intelligent Surface and underground: WaterGridSense 4.0, Sensor networks for Water management, Results
Sommer, Jakobs, Stremmel, Schenderlein, Skwarek, Kaven, Giutronich, Berlinski, Geldenhuis, and Thamsen
Evapotranspiration and Infiltration
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Rodriguez Sanchez and Jabeen 1.2a
9:00 Comparing hydrologic performance of blue green infrastructure design strategies in urban/semi-urban catchments for stormwater management
Adhikari, Kali, Broekhuizen, Sun, Sjöman, Randrup, Pons, Blecken, and Viklander
9:20 Integration of field analysis and lab scale experiments for the hydrological performance assessment of pervious pavements
Evangelisti, Cozzolino, Altobelli, and Maglionico
9:40 Quantifying catchment imperviousness for hydrological modelling
Loots, Smithers, and Kjeldsen
10:00 Green roof evapotranspiration (ET) modeling: sensibility insights using a hydrological model
Ouedraogo, Berthier, Sage, and Gromaire
Flash Monitoring hydrologic performance and evapotranspiration of four experimental green roofs: first results after 16 months
Bertrand-Krajewski, Martins Masso, Krøyer Johnsen, Choi, Deplette, Paraz, Bonneau, Vacherie, Poncet, Perier-Camby, and Grimard
Flash Monitoring and modelling overland and detention tank flow for a sewer-disconnected neighborhood in Denmark
Randall, Støvring, Buttinger-Kreuzhuber, Waser, and Meyer
Wednesday 12 June 9:00
Integrated Urban Water management Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Makris and Sanudo
9:00 SUDS UP: A Methodological Framework for SUDS Implementation in Urban Design de Carvalho, Veról, and de Sousa
9:20 Synergizing Deterministic and Deep Metaheuristic Algorithms for Efficient Sewage Network Design: A Comparative and Integrative Approach
Habermehl, Nazareth, Bakhshipour, Dilly, Haghighi, and Dittmer
9:40 Development and evaluation of Bioretention Stormwater Control Measures in TEB model to urban stormwater management
Tunqui Neira, Gromaire, Chancibault, and Chebbo
10:00 An Optimization-simulation Model for Integrated Green Infrastructures and Water Resource Management in Urban Water Systems
Zhang and Chui
Flash The Synergy of Integrated Design: WSUD Research Findings for Improved Infrastructure
Sapdhare and Beecham
Flash Estimation of Nitrogen Input in an urban eutrophic lake: N2O emissions in the Pampulha Reservoir (Brazil)
Neto, Pessoa, Silva and Nascimento
Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: Boogaard and Koning
Wednesday 12 June 11:00
11:00 Use of LID practices to increase resilience of floods in a highly urbanized catchment in a Brazilian city
Costa and Macedo
11:20 Alternative Linings for Roadside Swales: Controlled Plot Trials
Ellis, Leupp, Hunt
11:40
12:00
Preliminary assessment of the effectiveness of Bioretention Cells coupled with other green infrastructures to mitigate urban flooding
Gnecco, Nazarpour, and Palla
Bioretention mulch for stormwater treatment and maintenance
Jayakaran, Thompson, Boyd, and Mitchell
Flash Enhancing the Theoretical Realism of the Flow Modeling for Sponge-like Porous Bodies on Permeable Soil During Rain Events
Barcot, Larsson, and Lundy
Flash Urbanization Impact and LID Strategies in Erosion Prevention in a Residential Area in Brasília, Brazil.
Borges Barros, Leite Costa and Koide
Accumulation and Wash-off of Pollutants
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Lundy and Joshi
11:00
Clustering for source allocation: high temporal resolution measurements reveal source-specific dynamics of target and non-target micropollutants in wet-weather discharges
Furrer, Froemelt, Singer, and Ort
11:20 Factors influencing the quality of water in highway ditches
Laloge, Brisson, and Dagenais
11:40 Pavement Wear as a Source of Microplastics in Urban Stormwater Runoff
Smyth, Tan, van Seter, Passeport, and Drake
12:00
Accumulation and contaminant loads of sediments in gully pots: a comparison between land use types
Wei, Lundy, Muthanna, and Viklander
Flash Assessment of the sediment buildup and management in a tropical pre-developed environment
Garbanzos, Ty II, Belen, Bianes, and Maniquiz-Redillas
Wednesday 12 June 11:00
Forecasting and Real-Time Control
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Kerkez and Tik
11:00 In-Stream Impact of a Real-Time Control: A Case Study
Akin, Khojandi, Rexhausen, and Hathaway
11:20 Development and implementation of a large-scale Real Time Control system in Rotterdam
Liefting, Schoester, Schepers, and Langeveld
11:40
STORM.Control, Controlling Intelligent and Smart Storages based on precipitation forecasts
Sommer, Jakobs, Lindow, Stremmel, and Schenderlein
12:00 Component Testing of Real-Time Control in a Stormwater Constructed Wetland for Pathogen Reduction
Thirkell, Shi, Kolotelo, Winfrey, and Mccarthy
Flash ‘No Regrets’ Digital Solutions for reducing Overflow Spills
Taylor
Asset Management and Inspection Techniques
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Cherqui and Yildizli
11:00
11:20
Clogging in PICP and the geotextile conundrum
Armitage and Monyake
Data-driven asset management: toward the deployement of risk-based rehabilitation planning in Lausanne
Guericke, Caradot, Steffelbauer, Sonnenberg, Ziegler, Sadowski, Martinez, Zürcher, and Cherqui
11:40 Autonomous inspection robotics for urban drainage networks
Shepherd, Seyoum, Schellart, Boxall, and Tait
12:00 Development of tools and methods for the evaluation of the physical integrity of sewage networks
Tesfamariam, Heiderscheidt, and Rossi
Flash Assessment of Inspection Techniques for Rising Mains
Beenen, Scheperboer, Schellart, Gillar, and Naismith
Flash Sewer networks asset lifespan prediction: adapting machine learning techniques to fit the purpose
Masoumzadeh, laakso, and Kummu
UrbanPlanning
11:00
11:20
11:40
12:00
Wednesday 12 June 11:00
Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Kerbs and Chen
Hydrologic partitioning in urban watersheds using microbial community fingerprints
Rexhausen, Swanson, McCarthy, Epps and Hathaway
Future challenges for urban drainage systems regarding combined sewer overflow emissions
Hauser, Back, and Kleidorfer
Urban planning and changing stormwater design guidelines on system capacity: case site in Northern Finland with 60 years timeline
Mäki-Asiala, Haghighi, Hosseinzadeh, Hentilä, Jutila, Juholin, and Rossi
Multifractals as a Promising Framework for Addressing Sustainable Development and Associated Transformations
Tchiguirinskaia, Qiu, and Schertzer
Flash Enhancing resilience to urban flood events through ranking of assets in interdependent infrastructure networks
Chatzistefanou, Chen, Djordjevic, Vamvakeridou-Lyroudia, and Savic
Flash How to stop reinventing the wheel in blue-green infrastructure planning? A spatial multi criteria analysis framework based on value-focused thinking
Lacroix, Kuller, Dagenais, and Bichai
Wednesday afternoon | 14.30
Situated at a 30min drive is the city internationally recognised for its cheese: Gouda. Beyond the creation of this traditional Dutch food, Gouda had a rich history starting in the 13th century. Situated on top of very peaty soil combined with proximity to the Hollandse Ijssel, water has in many ways shaped the city of Gouda that we see today. Land subsidence, droughts and an increasing flooding danger have started to become more pressing in recent years. In this tour, we will see how the latest developments in urban drainage are applied to solve a multitude of water based issues and see if they are up to the test in a city that has struggled against the perils of water for over 8 centuries.
Limited to 30 people, additional cost of €22.50 pp
On the Wednesday afternoon, several excursions and special sessions have been organised. Below, they are detailed. All of these will be run from 14:30-17:30 (with the bus-based excursions being expected back later). We gather in front of the entrance to the conference center of TU Delft.
* Additional costs and limited capacity applies
Rotterdam and sustainable and innovative solutions to flood, drought, and water quality.* Excursion
Rotterdam, situated less than 15 km south of Delft, is a vibrant city having a long track record of very ambitious urban water management. The Rose Waterproject, which strongly connected urban development with urban water management, dates from the 1850s and Rotterdam has ever since been a frontrunner in urban drainage. In this tour, you will visit the oldest sewer pumping station of Rotterdam, situated in an historic building, a water retention basin situated below a massive parking garage, the famous water square and several novel blue-green solutions. A tour not to be missed!
Limited to 30 people, additional cost of €22.50 pp
Waternet covers the entire urban water cycle, from drinking water, urban drainage, transport mains and wastewater treatment in the city of Amsterdam. Circularity and climate change are two of the key drivers for adaptation of the existing infrastructure. In this tour, you will visit the Rivierenbuurt in Amsterdam, which was developed in the 1920s and 1930s. In order to reduce the vulnerability to urban pluvial flooding, Waternet has been updating the urban drainage, consisting of separate sewer systems, with an interesting mix of permeable pavements, infiltration facilities, storm water treatment, and green roofs. During the tour you will see how all these adaptations have been embedded in the urban fabric.
Limited to 64 people, additional cost of €22.50 pp
Around the conference centre, there are a number of unique research set-ups. Deltares, a research consultancy that was initially conceived to design the Dutch flood protections but has expanded in expertise, hosts a number of unique facilities: the Delta Flume (a flume where 1:1 scale tests can be done for flooding simulations), β-loop (testing high sludge concentration hydraulic transport) and Geo centrifuge to speed up soil-water processes by using 150g. Next to Deltares, we will visit Flood Proof Holland, where several open-air labs are build and operated for nature-based solutions. Lastely, we will visit the Green Village, a little neighbourhood on the TU Delft campus that functions as a unique test-bed for sustainable solutions for the urban environment. All within walking distance from the conference venueLimited to 30 people, no additional cost
The picturesque city of Delft seen from the plentiful urban canals that go through the city. Ones the intake point of over 130 beer breweries, the water quality of the canals deteriorated rapidly in the 18th-19th century as the city rapidly expanded. A combined sewer system was installed in and upgraded in the early 20th century, equipped with some 50 combined sewer overflows to avoid urban flooding. A special route has been set out for you, see if you can spot the outflow locations, whilst enjoying the canals, green areas and hidden tunnels.
Limited to 20 people, additional cost of €22.50 pp
Wednesday afternoon | 14.30
** Limited to 10 people.
Discussing the future or urban drainage legislation in Latin America – Organised by Nilo and ANA Brasil. Special Session
Urban drainage legislation is rapidly evolving in Latin America. One of the key drivers of the National Water and Sanitation Agency (ANA) is to ensure that the newly prepared legislation is based on the specific requirements of the area in combination with the latest understanding. ICUD is therefore the perfect moment to have an international meeting, spearheaded by the ANA about the evolving legislation in the Latin American region. This workshops aims to collect, discuss and report on the ideas from all participants with an interest in the region, ensuring meaningful and sustainable legislation can be delivered on.
Location: Commissiekamer / Commissionroom 2 in the Conference Centre
Serious Game development for sustainable urban water development – Organised by Aashna Mittal (TU Delft)** Special Session
Adaptive planning is essential to address urban flooding and ensure that urban areas are well adapted to climate change, involving cooperation between diverse stakeholders: municipality, citizens, water boards, housing corporations, and urban planners in The Netherlands. Serious gaming has been shown to be an effective tool to help stakeholders cooperate. The objective of the “The Urban dRain game” workshop is to facilitate the collaborative development of climate-resilient solutions for a Dutch neighbourhood. Participants will be challenged to combine a variety of solutions stormwater management – nature-based solutions, such as green roofs and permeable pavements, with grey infrastructure measures like sewer upgrades. The goal of the game is to find a combination that is not only cost-effective but also enhances the liveability in the neighbourhood and mitigates the risk of urban flooding.
Location: Commissiekamer / Commissionroom 4 in the Conference Centre
While real time control of single infrastructure elements for specific objectives like flood mitigation has been well-developed, real time control that optimises for multiple competing benefits (e.g. flood mitigation, waterway health, and stormwater harvesting) across integrated stormwater systems remains a huge challenge. Our workshop will address this need by bringing together experts from around the world to explore real time control strategies for stormwater infrastructure to meet multiple, often competing, objectives (e.g. flood mitigation, waterway health, and stormwater harvesting). The anticipated outcome of the workshop will be a white paper on the topic and a joint journal publication from the team.
Location: Commissiekamer / Commissionroom 3 in the Conference Centre
Water quality has always been of interest in the urban drainage community. Water quality sensors give reliable, long-term data on various parameters and are necessary to understand the key dynamics. In this session, Badger Meter have organised a site visit to Wilhelmina Park where s::can sensors are deployed by Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland as part of their water quality monitoring project in urban areas.
Location: Meet at the entrance of the Wilhelmina Park (10 mins walk from the ICUD)
Thursday 13 June
Thursday 13 June
08:00 Registration at welcome desk
09.00 Parallel Sessions: 5.5b 4.1e 1.1b 2.1b 6.3a
10.30 Coffee Break
11.00 Parallel Sessions: 3.1b 2.5a 5.4c 4.3c 3.4a
12.30 Lunch
13.30 4th keynote (chaired by Jeroen Langeveld)
Keynote Dr. Lena Mutzner
Emerging Contaminants in Urban Drainage Auditorium
See page 8
14.30 Parallel Sessions: 5.2c 2.2b 3.2b 5.6c 4.4a
16.00 Coffee Break
16.30 Parallel Sessions: 5.1a 1.4c 2.4a 4.1f 6.5a
18.30 - Conference Dinner
- Nieuwe Kerk, Markt 80, 2611 GW Delft (32 min walking from TU Delft, 22.30 or parking by car at Zuidpoort parking garage)
Delft and the Dutch Royal House are inseparable. Since William of Orange, almost all its members have been interred in the royal tombs in the Nieuwe Kerk. Scan for more information (in Dutch).
From 18:30 p.m. you are welcome in the Nieuwe Kerk for drinks and snacks accompanied by pleasant music. At 19.30 we will start dinner, which will be provided by Maison den Boer.
Thursday 13 June 9:00
Artificial Intelligence in Urban Drainage Room: Auditorium | Chairs: De Meester and Bach
9:00 Graph neural networks for urban drainage systems metamodeling
Garzón Díaz, Kapelan, Langeveld, and Taormina
9:20 Transferable Machine Learning methods for Predicting nitrate in diverse catchments
Janmohammadi, Shi, and McCarthy
9:40 Prediction of urban stormwater quality in data-deficient areas using a semi-supervised machine learning framework
Yan and Zhu
Flash Statistical and Machine Learning Models for Predicting Sediment Accumulation in an Urban River
Pimiento and Torres
Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Christiano and Andrusenko
9:00 Methodology to develop suds implementation cost estimators for early-stage decision support in urban drainage projects: case study northern cities of Peru
Martinez, Lopez, Mendoza, Canet, and Ramos
9:20 Can green beat grey? – Retrofit, redesign, and relocation approaches for adaptive flood mitigation in coastal cities with climate change uncertainty.
Muangsri and McWilliam
9:40 Utilising Multiple Stormwater Control Metrics to Design Vegetated SuDS with Continuous Rainfall Inputs
Stovin
10:00 Investigating Remediation Strategies for Urban Stormwater Ponds Exporting
Phosphorus
Taguchi, Herb, Gulliver, Janke, Finlay, and Natarajan
Flash Comparing the hydrologic and water quality performance of bioretention and high rate biofiltration at a marina in Huron, Ohio, United States
Fast, Winston, Dorsey, and Feliciano
Flash The functioning of water-storing roads in relation to groundwater
Schoonderbeek, Veldkamp, Kluck, and van der Lee
Thursday 13 June 9:00
Urban Rainfall and Radar Measurements
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Droste and Pons
9:00 Implementation of Quality Control Algorithms for Improved Rain Rate Estimates from Commercial Microwave Links at City Scale
Zheng, Fencl, Špačková, and Bareš
9:20 Analysing the impact of different precipitation characteristics on hydrological performances of infiltration swales
Bosco, Abdalla, Maurin, Matos Silva, Sousa, Muthanna, Alfredsen, and Sivertsen
9:40 Development of Taoyuan deep quantitative precipitation forecast
Kraemer, Leberke, Fitzner-Pukade, and Kuchenbecker
10:00
Predicting wet-weather runoff to wastewater treatment plant with conceptual model using attenuation data from cellular network
Yang, Chang, Chou, Chung, Liu, Lee, Ho, and Huang
Flash Multifractal comparison of three optical disdrometers and a mini vertically pointing Doppler radar, and consequences on rainfall extreme quantification in urban environment.
Fencl and Bareš
Flash Obtaining rainfall data from Commercial Microwave Links in Nigeria, Africa
Droste, Overeem, Bogerd, Leijnse, Walraven, Tricarico, Priebe, and Uijlenhoet
Pollutant Transport and Transformation
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Muschalla and Boening-Ullman
9:00 Long term monitoring of the Parisian conurbation: trends and perspectives
Bernier-Turpin, Thiebault, Le Roux, Alliot, Mebold, Guérin, and Moilleron
9:20 Field based evaluation of the impact of hydrocyclones on the quality of urban runoff water
Lekuona-Orkaizagirre, Meaurio-Arrate, Gredilla-Altonaga, Madrazo-Uribeetxebarria, Carrero-Hernández, and Garmendia-Antín
9:40 An evaluation of storage time and temperature on a range of stormwater quality parameters
Taneez, Österlund, Lundy, and Viklander
10:00 Development of a lab-scale controllable corrosion chamber to understand the role of condensation in concrete corrosion at the sewer crown
Yin, Yuan, and Li
Thursday 13 June 9:00
Socio-economics and Stakeholders Involvement Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Roozbahani and Sorensen
9:00 International knowledge exchange Nature Based Solution with the ClimateScan adaptation platform. Lessons learnt from Australia and Europe Boogaard, Schaart, and Kondratenko
9:20 Maximising the physical, environmental, human, and cultural outcomes of stormwater Nature-based Solutions (NbS) through design Charters, Challies, and Dionisio
9:40 Mainstreaming Property Level Flood Resilience through Serious Play: Towards a Lego ® Legacy. Hastings, Barsley, and Meville-Shreeve
10:00 Resident perspectives of top-down, municipal-scale, streetside bioretention in China, Sweden, and USA Smith, Lundy, Brooks, Blecken, Chen, Guo, Lundmark, Tang, Zhang, and Winston
Flash Cost-benefit analysis of stormwater source control measures for urban stormwater management in highly urbanized areas Solarte, Duchesne, Pelletier, and Torres
Thursday 13 June 11:00
UrbanFloods
Room: Auditorium| Chairs: Leitao and Brazier
11:00 Probabilistic Urban Flash Flood Forecasting with Data Assimilation
Oh, Bartos, Bibok, Timilsina,Passalacqua, and Maidment
11:20
11:40
12:00
Data Resolution vs. Model Complexity: Impacts on Pluvial Flood extent, Hazard and Damage Quantification
Fappiano, Maurer, and Leitao
Deep-Learning-based approach for a heavy rain and pluvial flash flood early warning system
Koltermann da Silva, Burrichter, and Quirmbach
Model-based investigations for the potential of decentralised Blue-Green Infrastructure for pluvial flood mitigation
Neumann, Scheid, and Dittmer
Flash Are traditional faecal indicators accurately assessing the public health risks of urban floods?
Scutt, Shucksmith, Jensen, Diaz-Nieto, and Douterelo
Flash Extreme Floods: 1D/2D Hydraulic Modeling with HEC-RAS and LiDAR
Pereira, Mendes, and Formiga
Combined Sewer Overflows
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Dittmer and van der Werf
11:00 Demonstration and Validation of an Open-Source Buoy for Locating Urban Pollutant Sources
Agade and Bean
11:20 Can We Trust Our Models? A Comprehensive Assessment of Current Model Structures in Predictive Modelling of Water Quality of CSOs
Chrysochoidis, Gruber, Hofer, Mikkelsen, and Vezzaro
11:40 Method to assess the impact of combined sewer overflows on surface water quality in a data-scarce area
De Meester, Bertels, Dirckx, and Willems
12:00 Spatial analysis of the combined sewer overflow durations in England and Wales
Sobral de Vito, Moreno-Rodenas, Schellart, Shucksmith, and Kapelan
Flash Results of a literature and mass balance study on trace substances within stormwater sewers and combined sewer overflows
Ertl, DeVito-Francesco, and Allabashi
Flash A new model to evaluate stormwater runoff quality
Vinck and De Bock
Model Development and Uncertainty Analysis
Thursday 13 June 11:00
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D| Chairs: Rivard and Milašinović
11:00 Scaling of a hydrodynamic model for an efficient long-term simulation of urban drainage systems
Broer, Syring, Schneider, and Tränckner
11:20 Automatic Sewer Network Generator for hydrodynamic models based on Open-Data: An Open-Source Plugin for QGIS
Novoa, Reyes-Silva, Helm, and Krebs
11:40 Designed, signed, sealed..? Investigating Urban Drainage System performance uncertainty introduced by the design process.
Pritsis, Pons, Rokstad, Clemens-Meyer, Kleidorfer, and Tscheikner-Gratl
12:00 Improving the reproducibility and provenance of urban drainage data and models with RENKU, a platform for sustainable data science
Chavarría, Tait, Lepot, Bertrand-Krajewski, Leitão, Rieckermann
Flash Performance Analysis of Storm Sewer Network Simplify and Grid Resolution by Basin Scale
Sim and Kim
CSO Treatment
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Winston and Stromberg 4.3c
11:00
Bioretention Inlet Efficiency: A Left Turn for Stormwater Runoff
De-Ville and Deeprose
11:20 Designing Floating Treatment Wetlands to Improve Water Quality Treatment in Stormwater Retention Ponds
Landon and Hunt
11:40 Evaluation of pollutant removal efficiency of urban stormwater wet ponds and the application of machine learning algorithms
Yang, Zhu, Loewen, Ahmed, Zhang, Yan, van Duin, and Mahmood
12:00 Enhancing organic chemical removal in stormwater biofilters using real time control
Zhang, Prodanovic, O’Carroll, Zheng, and Zhang
Flash Per and poly-fluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) removal by a radial flow cartridge system
Dalrymple, Allingham, Wicks, Jones, and McDonald
Thursday 13 June 11:00
Biodiversity and Aquatic Habitats
Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Nakajima and Melville-Shreeve
11:00 Effects of urbanization on small streams: Dynamics of water temperature and heat flux
Benisch, Helm, Mayer, Becker, and Krebs
11:20 Nitrogen and phosphorus removal performance of stormwater wet ponds and constructed wetlands in Calgary, Alberta
Huang, Zhu, Loewen, Zhang, Mahmood, and van Duin
11:40 Detection of terrestrial animals in urban runoff using environmental DNA
Jolejole, Uchida, Tobino, and Nakajima
12:00 Satellite data for monitoring and management support of small lake water quality
Zamzow, Bastin, and Matzinger
Thursday 13 June 14:30
Room: Auditorium| Chairs: Ljubicic and Janmodammadi
14:30 Simultaneous microbial detection in a stormwater catchment using passive sampling
Karamati Niaragh, Henry, Schang, Kolotelo, Palacios Delgado, and McCarthy
14:50
15:10
Exploring the use of mobile phone-based population dynamics for wastewater flow predictions in five Swiss catchments
Disch, Neuenhofer, Mahajan, Baumgartner, Ort, and Rieckermann
Analysis of dry weather flow and pump performance using long term pump registrations as a proxy for direct flow measurements
Van Assel and Kroll
15:30 Automated stormwater sampling through remote triggering using forecasts and real-time data
Van Hoey, Gobeyn, Roukaerts, De Vleeschouwer, Radinja, Renders, Vinck, and De Bock
Flash Integration of Eulerian and Lagrangian sensors for the rapid identification of contamination sources into the sewer system
Sambito and Freni
Contaminants of Concern
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Vezzaro and Wilson
14:30 A field study on concentration, treatment, and accumulation of PFASs in stormwater biofilter systems
Beryani, Österlund, Viklander, and Blecken
14:50 Physical extraction of highly-ecotoxic particles in road dust
Nakajima, Yao, and Tobino
15:10 Leaching of Mecoprop from 0° green roofs: How do extended water retention times and green roof materials influence the leaching of Mecoprop from bitumen sheets?
Nieß and Helmreich
15:30 Antibiotic Resistance in Urban Stormwater Runoff and Green Stormwater Infrastructure
O’Malley, McNamara, and McDonald
Flash Removal of persistence mobile and toxic contaminants from greywater for sustainable reuse in a phytoremediation experiment
Beral, Ma, Rodríguez-Mozaz, Buttiglieri, Radjenovic, and Comas
Thursday 13 June 14:30
Receiving Water Impacts
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Schellart and Ding
14:30 Towards an estimation of the chemical impact of combined sewer overflows from conductivity measured at high frequency
Ali Said, Superville, Maruejouls, and Billon
14:50 Improvement and understanding of water bodies quality through an integrated urban wastewater model
Mendes, Pierre, Valentin, and Maruéjouls
15:10 Assessment of Environmental Harm from wet weather spills based on continuous water quality monitoring
Mohan, Schellart, Tait, Norreys, and Digman
15:30 Environmental and human health risks from heavy metals in urban runoff sediments
Pimiento and Torres
Flash Predicting water quality in urban rivers: Linking high frequency monitoring and spatial rainfall
Guillot – Le Goff, Cartier, Carmigniani, Malardé, Saad, Dubois, Einfalt, and Vinçon-Leite
Asset Management and Inspection Techniques
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Tscheikner-Gratl and Guericke
14:30 An Analysis of Failure Mechanisms of Permeable Pavements
Almasalmeh, Langeveld, and Kapelan
14:50 Exploring New Frontiers in Sewer Inspection: Innovations Beyond Drones and AI
Lastra, Ortega, and Pinilla
15:10 Urban drainage system modelling for the masses: an interactive web interface for US EPA-SWMM
Schmidt and Kerkez
15:30 Self-supervised learning approach for automatic sewer defect detection
Yildizli, Jia, Langeveld, and Taormina
Flash Asset Management for Green Stormwater Infrastructure: Condition Scores and Long Term Performance
Spraakman, Sharma, Humes, and McManus
Thursday 13 June 14:30
Urban Stream Restoration Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Jia and Nolan
14:30 Determination of priority areas for urban river restoration using a multi-criteria a pproach supported by Geographic Information Systems
Lima, Verol and Miguez
14:50 Converting Existing Dry Ponds into Constructed Stormwater Wetlands: A Straightfoward Retrofit Opportunity to Improve Pollutant Treatment Hunt, Waickowski, and Mazer
15:10 An integrated study to minimise impact of wastewater system Eindhoven on receiving waters and optimise CSO location
van Daal-Rombouts, Liefting, Langeveld, and Weijers
15:30 We Cannot Bypass the Bypass
Wadzuk, Myers, Kuncken, Zaremba, Hess, Amur, and Traver
Flash Retrofitting interventions with Sustainable urban Drainage Solutions for the hydraulic risk mitigation: the case study of Catania (Sicily, Italy)
Sciuto, Rizzo, Licciardello, Masi, Barbagallo, and Cirelli
Flash Optimization Framework for Designing a Urban Road-Based Major Drainage System to Cope with Extreme Storms
Shao, Wei, and Gong
Thursday 13 June 17:00
Room: Auditorium | Chairs:Krebs and Pichler
17:00 Nudging the Digitalization in Estonian Water Sector
Annus, Truu, Kändler, and Kaur
17:20 Sewer discharge data fusion for reduction of in-situ measurement uncertainty
Ivetić, Prodanović, Rak, Milašinović, Ljubičić
17:40 The role of open data in regulating Combined Sewer Overflows
Schellart, Sharp, Bertrand-Krajewski, and Rieckermann
18:00 A framework concept for semi-automated quality testing & substitute value generation for low-cost precipitation & discharge data
Schulz, Niemann, and Mietzel
Flash Web-based interactive identification tool for critical source areas of urban diffuse pollution
Joseph, Haacke, Kluge, and Paton
Flash Expanding access to hydrologic data: Supporting local environmental initiatives with an open access API serving urban water data from a 160+ sensor network
Schmidt, Nie, Lynch, Tobias, Borg, Marchionda, and Kerkez
17:00
Accumulation and Wash-off of Pollutants Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Bartos and Montes
Multilayer Blue-Green Roof: a sink or a source of pollutants?
Cristiano, Carucci, Piredda, Dessì, Urru, Deidda, and Viola
17:20 Nature-Based Solutions as first barriers for runoff pollutants
Garcia-Arguelles, Karlsson, Andrés-Valeri, Prieto-Quintana, and Rodriguez-Hernandez
17:40 Tunnel wash water: Quality and implications for management and the environment
Vistnes, Sossalla, and Meyn
18:00 Predicting the Magnitude of Erosion Downslope of Stormwater Pipe Outlets
Waickowski, Hunt, and Cartner
Flash Assessment of daily pollutant accumulation rates on impervious surfaces in two seasons
Djukić, Lekić, Rajaković-Ognjanović, Naunovic, and Prodanović
Sewer Infiltration and Exfiltration
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Ort and Neuenhofer
17:00 Data-Enabled Method for Monitoring of Urban Drainage: Evaluating Sewer Inflow and Infiltration via Simple Indicators
Ge, Yuan, Li, Qiu, and Huang
17:20 Impact of Inflow and Infiltration on Sanitary Sewer in Brazil: Insights from a 20-Year Study of 47 Networks
Marega, Drake, and Meyer
17:40 Electric Conductivity for Groundwater Infiltration Detection in Wastewater Networks: Case Study in Northern & Southern Finland
Motamedi, Rossi, and Heiderscheidt
18:00 Sewer leakage fingerprinting: measured variation in electrical current due to defects in a PVC pipe wall.
Stegeman, van der Werf, Slob, and Langeveld
Flash Quick scanning the extraneous water at a wastewater treatment plant.
Stegeman, Henckens, de Ridder, and Stapel
Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Hathaway and Smith
17:00 Restoring Ephemeral Gullies in the Urban Piedmont of North Carolina with Regenerative Stormwater Conveyance: Two Case Studies and a Synthesis of Design Guidance and Performance Crediting
Mitchell and Hunt
17:20 Synthesis of barriers to implementation of Blue-Green Infrastructure for urban stormwater – case studies in Uganda, Rwanda & Sweden
Mugume, Léonce, Umaru, Wali, Nilsson, and Sörensen
17:40 How far can we rely on lined green infrastructures for urban runoff control? A case study in Paris conurbation
Sage, Durmont, and Gromaire
18:00 Complementing the blue-green infrastructure with a soil-pipe system to enhance urban resilience to climate change
Walther and Quirmbach
Flash Design of suds for control and processing of streams with diffused channels in transportation and public space projects. Case study Bogotá.
Fonseca, Aguilar, Félix Gómez, Burgos, Arbeláez Segura, Ramírez Cely, Calle Bueno, Jiménez Rocha, and Ruiz Rueda
Thursday 13 June 17:00
Flash Hydrologic performance of bioretention systems with unfavourable underground conditions: complementing field monitoring with simple reservoir modelling for scenario analysis
Huang, Sage, Técher, and Gromaire
Benchmarking and Performance Indicators
Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Kroll and Paus
17:00 Holistic sustainability assessment of hybrid urban water system: coupling Life Cycle Assessment with Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment
Neta, Gilboa, and Friedler
17:20 Sustainability Index Assessment of Urban Stormwater Systems Under LID and Non- LID Scenarios
Roozbahani, Nilsen, Paus, and Rydningen
17:40 Valuing of multiple benefits of Blue and Green Infrastructure: case study of Davidshall, Malmö
Utkina, Viklander, Blecken, Kali, Adhikari, Sun, Deak Sjöman, and Randrup
Friday 14 June
Friday 14 June
09.00 Parallel Sessions: 5.7c 2.6a 3.2c 5.4d 4.1g
10.30 Coffee Break
11.00 Parallel Sessions: 2.7a 5.2d 1.2b 2.8b 4.3d
12.30 Lunch
13.30 5th keynote, (chaired by Zoran Kapelan)
Keynote Prof. Michael Templeton
Equitable water management around the globe
Auditorium
See page 8
14.30 Closing Session
During the closing session, the formal hand over of the chair position of the JCUD will take place and the new chair will present his/her ideas on the years to come. In addition, key future conferences (UDM2025, NOVATECH 2026, SPN2026 and ICUD2027 will be presented.
Auditorium
Friday 14 June 9:00
Modelling of SuDS
Room: Auditorium| Chairs: De-Ville and Wu
9:00 Enhancing Sustainable Urban Drainage in Houston, Texas: An Integrated Hydrologic and Hydraulic Modeling Approach for Green Stormwater Infrastructure Planning
Nariz and Eisma
9:20 Optimizing urban permeability: a GIS-based site selection approach for permeable pavements: a case study of Santander, Spain.
Roldán-Valcarce, Jato-Espino, Manchado, and Gonzalez Ávila
9:40 Sustainable Drainage Design Based on the Analytical Hierarchy Process
Tanyimboh and Nyawo
10:00
Balancing hydrological, terrain and cost factors: a multi-objective optimization framework for bio-retention cell layout
Xu, Randall, and Li
Flash Evaluation of EPA SWMM application in tropical green roof modelling
Gomes, Carvalho, and Moura
Illicit Connections and Fog Deposits
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Van Assel and Shi
9:00 Automated detection of illicit connections from distributed temperature sensing data using convolution neural networks
Post, Makris, Schilperoort, Gerritsen, and Hof
9:20 Picking the best method to detect illicit connections to storm sewers
Schilperoort, Post, Makris, Klootwijk, Hoefeijzers, Schmitt, McCarthy, and Langeveld
9:40 Passive sampling to detect illicit wastewater discharges: association rate laboratory tests
Walujono, Schang, Henry, Winfrey, and McCarthy
10:00 Detecting the Source of Illegal Discharges by Applying Low-Cost Sensors
Wang, Shi, Pang, Zhu, Kolotelo, and McCarthy
Friday 14 June 9:00
Receiving Water Impacts
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Kapelan and Gavric
9:00 Analysis of sulfur, iron, and manganese dynamics in Tokyo Bay by field observations and Hydrodynamic-Ecosystem Coupled Model
S. Nakamura, Higa, Okada, Y. Nakamura, and Inoue
9:20 River metabolism in a highly urbanized city revealed by decades of intensive monitoring
Njapou, Mouchel, Escoffier and Guerin
9:40 Application of water quality model to generate E. coli dispersion database for water safety prediction in the estuary of Tokyo, Japan
Poopipattana, Kumar, and Furumai
10:00 SPINpy 1 for Watershed Scale Erosion Analysis in Urban Streams
Thirimanne and MacVicar
5.4d
Model Development and Uncertainty Analysis
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Mohan and Roozbahani
9:00 Benchmarking GLM and Delft3D Models in Two Window Lakes in South East Queensland, Australia
Phillips, Griffin, Treloar, and Yu
9:20 Automated modelling of urban runoff quality based on domain knowledge and equation discovery
Radinja, De Bock, Vinck, Džeroski, and Atanasova
9:40 Free distribution coupled drainage model linking the models IBER and Storm Water Management Model (SWMM). Methodology, workflows and use cases by using Giswater as data preprocess tool.
Torret, Sañudo, Cea, Puertas, Bladé, and Sanz
10:00 Integrated Modeling and Uncertainty Assessment of Urban Flooding
Wang, Dong, Fu, Dong, Gan, Zhang, Fang, Liu, and Zhang
Flash Analysis of water level data uncertainties on gradually varied flow estimation using DREAM and GLUE models
Reis, Santos, Silva, Mendes, Carvalho and Formiga
Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Andrusenko and Okedi
9:00 Observing the ‘Urban Karst’ phenomenon and its effects on infiltration based stormwater control measures
Boening-Ulman, Tirpak, Martin,Braswell, Hunt, and Winston
9:20 Assessment of cost-effective combinations of low-impact development strategies for India
Bose, Kalbar, and Modal
9:40 Model based assessment of performance of tree pits constructed after the stockholm model
König, Pichler, and Muschalla
10:00 The impact of GIs on hydrological connectivity across the urban watershed
Xie and Chui
Flash Shallow-Media Bioretention Cells: A Hydrologic Case for Expanded Installation
Ellis, Tormey, and Hunt
Flash Implementation of Nature-Based Solutions in Viet Nam, a case study in Da Nang
Huynh, Ngoc, and Kleidorfer
Friday 14 June 11:00
Wastewater-based Epidemiology
Room: Auditorium | Chairs: McCarthy and Pedersen
11:00 Use of passive sampling to characterize the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater
Mayer, Geissler, Dumke, Helm, and Krebs
11:20
Passive sampling of SARS-CoV-2 and normalisation markers in wastewater for interpretation of COVID-19 trends in Victoria.
Schang, Nolan, Poon, Martinie, Robinson, Sumpton, Agostinhoantao, West, Sarkis, Yuan, Tseng and McCarthy
11:40 Sediment-based epidemiology, an utopia?
Thiebault, Simonneau, Lanos, Dufresne, Le Milbeau, Ardito, Augustin, Hatté, Morio, and Jacob
12:00 Development of a phenomenological sewer water quality model to enhance wastewater-based epidemiology
Tik, Lopez Vega, Tan, Noël, Maere, Celikkol, Meng, Frigon, Poirier-Gagnon, Rioux, Hajj-Mohamad, Dorner, Nourbakhsh, Yusuf, Champredon, Fazil, and Vanrolleghem
Flash From Pathogens to Pharmaceuticals: Expansion of surveillance in wastewater. Madrid case of Study.
Lastra, Ortega, Botello, and Pinilla
Flash OBSERVE - Wastewater as an indicator of population health
Serrano, Serra-Compte, Quina, Gonzalez, Reyes, Galofre, and Diaz
Instrumentation, Measurement and Monitoring
Room: Lectureroom A / Collegezaal A | Chairs: Van der Werf and Pichler
11:00 Towards camera-based sewer discharge monitoring: experiences using a low-cost DIY setup
Ljubičić, Ivetić, and Milašinović
11:20 Lessons learnt from the continuous monitoring of infiltration systems
Vinck and De Bock
11:40 Identifying wetland weaknesses using high-spatial resolution and low-cost water quality sensing methods
Wang, Shi, Kolotelo, and McCarthy
12:00 Evaluation of new flow and water quality monitoring equipment in sewers under realistic flow conditions
Peña-Haro, Burckbuchler, García, Naves, Kuhn, Carreres-Prieto, Fischer, and Anta
Friday 14 June 11:00
Evapotranspiration andInfiltration
Room: Lectureroom D / Collegezaal D | Chairs: Broekhuizen and Adhikari
11:00 Objective Function Evaluation in SWMM: Implications for Rainfall-Runoff Modeling in Urban Catchments
Assaf, Salis, Manenti, Tamellini, and Todeschini
11:20 Sensitivity analysis of FAO Penman–Monteith reference evapotranspiration (ETo) to climatic variables: the case study of Genoa in Italy.
Jabeen and Palla
11:40 Vegetation performance under heatwave and drought conditions in an experimental raingarden at RBGE in Scotland
Kalaichelvam, Kelly, and Wilson
12:00 Studying the cooling effects of Lagerstroemia indica and Quercus virginiana urban street trees in Charleston, USA
Shetty, Sands, Burns, and Campbell
Flash The role of evapotraspiration in the hydrologic restoration in different climatic contexts and for future climatic scenarios.
Palla, Grossi, Dada, Jabeen, Turco, Palermo, Piro, and Gnecco
Flash Water Demand and Availability at Urban Tree Sites: Impact of Climate Change
Depending on Age and Tree Pit
Rosenberger, Leandro, Wood, and Helmreich
Hydraulics of Urban Drainage Networks
Room: Senate Room / Senaatzaal | Chairs: Schutze and Wang
11:00 Influence of grate geometry on hydraulic energy losses in a surcharging manhole under flood conditions
Brazier, Shucksmith, and Nichols
11:20 Integrating FMEA and hydrodynamic modelling for enhanced urban stormwater management
Funke, Reinstaller, Kearney, and Kleidorfer
11:40 Modelling of unintended attenuation in urban catchments: a case study in Tshwane, South Africa
Loots and Coetzee
12:00 Effects of wastewater drag force and forced ventilation on headspace air movement in a straight pipe with a sluice gate
Zuo, Qian, and Zhu
Flash Experimental study on the particle-plate Collision in dropshafts
Liu, Liu, Huang and Zhu
CSO Treatment Room: Van Hasselt Room / Van Hasselt Zaal | Chairs: Trackner and Abasi
11:00 Hydrologic and water quality performance of an infiltrating constructed stormwater treatment wetland at an industrial marina in Superior, Wisconsin, United States
Fast, Winston , Dorsey, and Ramage
11:20
Surveillance and dimensioning of centralized filtration systems for stormwater treatment
Hilbrands and Grüning
11:40 Insights on the pollutant removal resilience and implications on the hydraulic conductivity of biochar amendments in bioswales
Paéz-Curtidor, Porter, and Helmreich
12:00 Climate robust integration of green and grey infrastructure for CSO-reduction
Strømberg, Pons, Tscheikner-Gratl, and Muthanna
Flash Merging SuDS and treatment wetland knowledge for improving bioretention system design for stormwater water pollution control
Rizzo, Tondera, and Blecken
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In the coming decades, parts of the wastewater chain will need optimization, replacement and expansion. This will have major financial consequences for the municipalities and water boards in Flevoland. The Flevoland wastewater chain cooperation (SAF) offers opportunities for innovation, whereby we can respond to new, complex social challenges in the areas of climate adaptation, energy transition, circular economy and digitalization. We regard our wastewater as a source of raw materials and energy. We cooperate actively, both within and outside the region. We encourage and support research and innovation, both financially and in practice. Here, in addition to technical innovation and renewal, we also have an eye for innovations in the legal, financial, and social fields. We see innovation as the main driver of our tasks. In the coming years, we will put most of our energy into innovation and additionally into operations.
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your agenda
UDM (Urban Drainage Modelling) Conference in Innsbruck, Austria 2025
SPN (Sewer Processes and Networks) Conference in Trondheim, Norway 2026
NOVATECH 2026 in Lyon, France 2026
ICUD2027 in Ningbo, China 2027