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Challenge / Goal

Dublin has experienced significant economic and urban development since 1990. This development, however, poses a problem because Dublin is confronted with recurrent floods. One of the major events occurred in 2011, when heavy rain fell on the east coast of Ireland. Within three hours, rainfall reached 80 millimetres, equivalent to three days of precipitation. Two rivers that flow through the city, the Dodder and Camac rivers, overflowed their banks, flooding about 300 homes and drowning two people. At the same time, torrential rains flooded major roads and one of Dublin's largest shopping centres. This major event required the initiation of an emergency plan to counteract future floods. 
On average, it is estimated that flood damage to the city infrastructure ranges from €2 million to €100 million per annum, currently, with an approximate of €8 million per annum. According to Gerard O`Connell,  from Dublin's City Flood-Advisory office, this figure is increasing due to sea-level rise and more intense rainfall. 

Solution

Smart Dublin, a programme run by the capital's four local authorities, deployed low-cost sensors across the capital to monitor rainfall, weather conditions and river levels. The sensors work by communicating data wirelessly to Dublin City Council’s operations team, who are then able to analyse water levels and take appropriate action. The sensors work by using an “Internet of Things” network called Pervasive Nation (developed by the CONNECT Centre, a Science Foundation Ireland Research Centre at Trinity College Dublin). 

The aim of the project is to give an early warning of potential flooding across the Dublin region. After a successful pilot scheme at Ballymun Library; the Bannow Road drainage depot, in Cabra; the storm-overflow tank in Clontarf; and the University College Dublin campus, at Belfield, new projects and partners have been on-boarded, breaking into several workstreams, while remaining under the umbrella of ‘Flood Management’ (a separate initiative to our Gully Monitoring project).

Additional sensors for monitoring of water levels (rain and river) have been added including:

  • 25 Rainfall Sensors using LoRaWAN connectivity
  • 10 River Level Sensors using Sigfox connectivity
  • 56 sensors (river, rainfall, weather stations etc) using cellular connectivity

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Time period

Implementation time: 6 months to 1 year

Implementers

Dublin City Council, Intel, and CONNECT Research Centre

Service providers

Intel

End users

Dublin City Council

    Main benefits

  • Increasing safety

  • Enhanced data collection

  • Single access point for information

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