Published August 8, 2013
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A New Alternative to Saving Our Beaches from Sea-Level Rise: The Sand Engine

  • 1. Delft University of Technology
  • 2. Harbour, Coastal and Offshore Engineering, Deltares, P.O. Box 177, 2600 MH Delft, The Netherlands
  • 3. Royal Boskalis Westminster NV, Hydronamic, P.O. Box 43, 3350 AA Papendrecht, The Netherlands, EcoShape, Building with Nature, Burgemeester de Raadtsingel 69, 3311 JG Dordrecht, The Netherlands
  • 4. Rijkswaterstaat
  • 5. Australian National University
  • 6. UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education

Description

ABSTRACT Stive, M.J.F.; de Schipper, M.A.; Luijendijk, A.P.; Aarninkhof, S.G.J.; van Gelder-Maas, C.; van Thiel de Vries, J.S.M.; de Vries, S.; Henriquez, M.; Marx, S., and Ranasinghe, R., 2013. A new alternative to saving our beaches from local sea-level rise: the sand engine. A boldly innovative soft engineering intervention, comprising an unprecedented 21.5 Mm3 sand nourishment known as the Sand Engine, has recently been implemented in the Netherlands. The Sand Engine nourishment is a pilot project to test the efficacy of local mega-nourishments as a counter measure for the anticipated enhanced coastal recession in the 21st century. The proposed concept, a single mega-nourishment, is expected to be more efficient, economical, and environmentally friendly in the long term than traditional beach and shoreface nourishments presently being used to negate coastal recession. Preliminary numerical model results indicate that this local nourishment will result in the widening of the beach along a 10 to 20 km s...
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