Evaluation of the Traffic Impacts of Mass Evacuation of Halifax: Flood Risk and Dynamic Traffic Microsimulation Modeling

Author:

Alam MD Jahedul1,Habib Muhammad Ahsanul2,Quigley Kevin3,Webster Tim L.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Resource Engineering, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada

2. School of Planning, and Department of Civil and Resource Engineering, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada

3. School of Public Administration, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada

4. Applied Geomatics Research Group, Nova Scotia Community College, Lawrencetown, NS, Canada

Abstract

This paper presents a comprehensive evaluation of traffic impacts of a mass evacuation of the Halifax Peninsula under several flooding scenarios. Flood extent and associated damages to the transport network are identified through digital elevation modeling that intersects with the Halifax stream and transport networks. The resulting flood scenarios inform a traffic microsimulation model that uses a dynamic traffic assignment-based microsimulation approach and simulates the evacuation of 34,808 evacuees estimated from the Halifax Regional Transport Network Model. The simulation results suggest that flooding of the links by 7.9 m flood reduces alternative evacuation routes by 31.2%. It takes 15 hours to evacuate 83% of evacuees while the remaining 17% are not accommodated in the network due to reduced network capacity. The number of vehicles in the network has peaked at 13,000 in this flooding scenario. An evaluation of network performance reveals a sustained congestion prevailing from 4th to 7th hour of the evacuation. The novelty of this study is that it develops a comprehensive tool of flood risk and dynamic traffic microsimulation modeling to offer an in-depth evaluation of potential impacts during evacuation. The results will help emergency professionals in evacuation planning and making emergency decisions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference21 articles.

1. California Coastal Commission. The Tohoku Tsunami of March 11, 2011: A Preliminary Report on Effects to the California Coast and Planning Implications. State of California Natural Resources Agency, San Francisco, CA, 2011, pp. 1–40.

2. Lohr U. Laser Scanning for DEM Generation. Computational Mechanics Publications, Southampton, UK, 1998, pp. 243–249.

3. Halifax Harbour extreme water levels in the context of climate change: scenarios for a 100-year planning horizon

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