Resistance versus resilience approaches in road planning and design in delta areas: Mekong floodplains in Cambodia and Vietnam
Creators
- 1. UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education
- 2. National University of Singapore
- 3. Delft University of Technology
- 4. WWF Greater Mekong Programme, Vientiane , Lao PDR, PO Box 7871, Vientiane , Lao PDR
- 5. Southern Institute for Water Resources Planning, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam , 2A Nguyen Bieu, quan 5, TP.Ho Chí Minh, Vietnam
- 6. Mekong River Commission
Description
Engineering works in river basins that explicitly take into account floodplain hydraulic processes and dynamics, demonstrate a move towards more sustainable development in riparian areas. In this paper, this concept is applied to road planning and design in floodplains. The paper suggests that although a resilience strategy might require higher initial investments than a resistance strategy, in the longer term it will result in lower costs in terms of road damage and ecological damage. Results are presented from four cases in the Mekong floodplains where different strategies towards road planning, varying in resilience, have been assessed for their hydraulic, ecological, social and economic impacts based on a combination of modelling results, expert judgement and secondary data sources. The study finds that, with the exception of extreme cases, the impact of roads has a limited impact on the floodplain hydraulics. However, even small changes in flood dynamics (arrival of the peak, duration) may have large...
Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
Journal of Environmental Planning and Management
Publisher:
Informa UK Limited
ISSN:
09640568
Volume:
55
Pages:
1289-1310
References