flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Resilience team selected to help protect a vulnerable Bridgeport, Conn., from floods

Resiliency

Resilience team selected to help protect a vulnerable Bridgeport, Conn., from floods

The design and construction project would perpetuate efforts that date back several years.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | February 21, 2018

A rendering of the project area of Bridgeport, Conn.'s South End, where an AEC team has been selected to devise a resilience plan to mitigate future flooding. Image: Courtesy of Waggonner & Ball

The Connecticut Department of Housing has hired a multidisciplinary team to design resilience plans to minimize the impact of future flooding and rising sea levels on the state’s largest city, Bridgeport, where recent storms left streets flooded for days and weakened the city’s infrastructure.

The team includes WSP USA, a leading engineering and professional services firm, which is responsible for project management, public outreach, civil and geotechnical engineering, and environmental assessments. Arcadis, the global design and consultancy firm, is handling this project’s numerical modeling and the design of coastal flood risk reduction structures—such as elevated roadways and pedestrian corridors, levees, and berms—to provide dry egress and reduce flood risk from coastal surges. 

Arcadis is also undertaking interior drainage solutions, environmental assessments, and support stakeholder and community engagement.

Waggonner & Ball, a New Orleans-based architectural firm, is collaborating with Yale Urban Design Workshop to lead this project’s architecture and urban design, and coordinate landscape architecture, as well as support public engagement.

A new stormwater system is scheduled to begin construction in the spring of 2019. Image: Courtesy of Waggonner & Ball

 

The focus of this project—whose construction should start in about a year—will be protecting businesses and residents in Bridgeport’s South End. The project includes the continuation of a Rebuilt by Design pilot project—a $6.5 million stormwater system designed by Arcadis, Waggonner & Ball, and Yale Urban Workshop, with Reed Hillebrand.

That pilot—whose construction is also expected to begin in the Spring of 2019 and be completed in the Fall of 2022—includes a 2.5-acre stormwater park that will be integrated into the urban landscape to store and manage rainwater runoff and relieve the city’s sewer system overflows.

Bridgeport has been trying to mitigate its flooding problems for a while. After Superstorm Sandy in October 2012, the city was awarded $10 million for planning, design, and construction via the federal government’s Rebuild By Design competition.

Arcadis, which has been advising Bridgeport on resilience since 2014, helped the city secure another $41 million million in funding through HUD’s National Disaster Resilience competition for 2015-16.

In its goals for 2017-18, the city of Bridgeport lists the design and construction for the replacement of two bridges, replacing the Eldon Roger Park culvert as part of Phase One of its Ox Brook Flood Control project. The city also plans to implement an inspection of about 40 bridges. 

Tags

Related Stories

Resiliency | Aug 19, 2021

White paper outlines cost-effective flood protection approaches for building owners

A new white paper from Walter P Moore offers an in-depth review of the flood protection process and proven approaches.

Resiliency | Aug 4, 2021

A new team forms to assess climate change’s effects on the built environment

Arup and First Street Foundation are using extensive datasets to develop risk-mitigating resilience solutions.

Resiliency | Jul 15, 2021

A new report urges federal investment in healthier buildings

The National Institute of Building Sciences also calls for code changes and greater cooperation between building owners and the AEC community.

Resiliency | Jun 24, 2021

Oceanographer John Englander talks resiliency and buildings [new on HorizonTV]

New on HorizonTV, oceanographer John Englander discusses his latest book, which warns that, regardless of resilience efforts, sea levels will rise by meters in the coming decades. Adaptation, he says, is the key to future building design and construction.

High-rise Construction | May 27, 2021

The anti-high rise: Seattle's The Net by NBBJ

In this exclusive video interview for HorizonTV, Ryan Mullenix, Design Partner with NBBJ, talks with BD+C's John Caulfield about a new building in Seattle called The Net that promotes wellness and connectivity. 

Resiliency | Mar 2, 2021

Elizabeth River Project's Resilience Lab set to break ground this year

Work Program Architects is designing the project.

Codes and Standards | Dec 9, 2020

Investors want building resiliency plans and risk mitigation practices

Owners should assess risk, insurance coverage, and ability to withstand disasters.

Resiliency | Nov 5, 2020

CRE investors are concerned that cities aren’t resilient enough for climate change

A new ULI-Heitman report states that the biggest challenge to valuation is measuring urban risk mitigation.

Sustainability | Aug 11, 2020

Sustainability is key for Denver Water’s modernized campus and distribution system

The utility is showcasing a new admin building and a water reuse plan that’s a first for the state.

Resiliency | Mar 13, 2020

Feds push use of eminent domain to force people out of flood-prone homes

Local officials that don’t comply could lose federal money to combat climate change.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021