cbear1
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 26, 2007
- 12
Hi All,
I am working on a project where an existing bridge has been built within a mapped floodplain (Zone A). There is no FEMA BFE at this site, but it is clear from other indicators that the bridge is overtopped by up to 10-15 feet during severe storms. The client wants to laterally widen this bridge by 4 feet. Fema guidelines and this County's policies require that alteration of structures in a floodway requires that a civil engineer certify that the alteration will not cause any increase in the base flood elevation (100 year).
This is a small project for a bridge spanning 15 feet (exist. width is 12'). The civil engineer does not want to certify that there will be no increase in BFE without a full hydro study, but the client cannot afford this. Common sense says that a 4' increase (piers will be outside the channel, beyond top-of-bank) will not cause the BFE to rise, but is there another way of proving this without a full hydro study? Maybe assuming flow that overtops the bridge by a foot - if it doesn't make the BFE rise, then higher flows where there is just more water in the floodplain would not make it rise. Is this sound reasoning?
Thank you for reading. Any help is appreciated.
I am working on a project where an existing bridge has been built within a mapped floodplain (Zone A). There is no FEMA BFE at this site, but it is clear from other indicators that the bridge is overtopped by up to 10-15 feet during severe storms. The client wants to laterally widen this bridge by 4 feet. Fema guidelines and this County's policies require that alteration of structures in a floodway requires that a civil engineer certify that the alteration will not cause any increase in the base flood elevation (100 year).
This is a small project for a bridge spanning 15 feet (exist. width is 12'). The civil engineer does not want to certify that there will be no increase in BFE without a full hydro study, but the client cannot afford this. Common sense says that a 4' increase (piers will be outside the channel, beyond top-of-bank) will not cause the BFE to rise, but is there another way of proving this without a full hydro study? Maybe assuming flow that overtops the bridge by a foot - if it doesn't make the BFE rise, then higher flows where there is just more water in the floodplain would not make it rise. Is this sound reasoning?
Thank you for reading. Any help is appreciated.