An integrated modeling approach for the assessment of land use change effects on wastewater infrastructures
Creato da
Primativo, Francesca
Macchione, Francesco
Giustolisi, Orazio
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Dottorato di Ricerca in Ingegneria Idraulica per l’Ambiente e il Territorio,Ciclo XVII bis,a.a. 2008-2009; The simulation of sewage systems and wastewater treatment plants is a strategic aspect for
assessing the effect of new dwellings on the existing water facilities. This constitutes a quite
common problem, since usually new edification areas are planned without looking at the effect that
new scenarios will cause on the existent infrastructures.
In this Thesis integration of water pollution and land use change models is presented and applied
to a case study. The water pollution is meant as the complex relationship between proposed housing
development and wastewater pollution incident control. The aim of these models is about the
impact of new edification areas on the existent watercourse.
This Thesis introduces an integrated framework made by a land use change model, a sewage
system simulator and a wastewater treatment plant simulator. This is a complex system since each
element is characterized by different dynamics. The land use change model simulates the expansion
of an urban area according to planners’ guidelines; the sewage system simulator investigates the
response of the drainage system to the expansion as well as its flexibility. The wastewater treatment
plant is simulated in order to assess the impact of the new inflowing discharges on the existing
plant.
This Thesis describes the motivation, the rational and implementation details of a modeling
framework namely Stochastic System Dynamics Integrative Model (SSDIM), which is an effort to
bridge the gap of integrated models for decision making in urban planning. By combining automatic
decision support tools with an integrated framework that brings together land use change and
wastewater network infrastructure, it enables the analysis of the effect of alternative long-term
urbanisation plans on the quality of the surrounding environment, measured through water
indicator. The functionality of the SSDIM was demonstrated through a semi-hypothetical case
study, in which three planning scenarios were evaluated for a new housing area against the quality
of the wastewater drained by a sewer system and eventually treated by a wastewater treatment plant.
On the one hand, the study highlighted the flexibility in representing planning scenarios and settingup
the sewer networks in the framework and demonstrated that the framework, as a conceptual and
quantitative tool, can easily accommodate for the complexity involved in a real-world case study.
On the other hand, the results emphasised that the framework was able to capture the evolving
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impact of urban planning over a long term period, which play an important role in understanding
the existing system and environmental capacities, and thus SSDIM provides a valuable decision
support aid in the urban planning process.
In the first part of this Thesis, the setting and motivation for the framework proposed and an
extensive review of the studies available from literature are discussed as well as the legal
background related to the problem at stake
The second part of the Thesis presents the elements of the models implemented: in particular,
both the conceptual representation and the implementation details are discussed in depth.
Finally in the last part of the Thesis, an application of the developed framework to a real world
environmental problem and the results of the application of the framework to a case study is
described. The case study represents a sewage network of a town located in south west of Scotland
and its wastewater treatment plant, where some urban development scenarios are assumed; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Ingegneria idraulica; Trasporti; Acque reflue; Smaltimento reflui
Relazione
ICAR/02;