Summary: | This paper describes an improved building treatment approach (IBTA) for use in urban inundation modeling. In this approach, the ground surface elevation was raised by the threshold (h) of the building entrance height to account for both the blockage and storage effect of areas with dense building coverage. A higher roughness coefficient was assigned to the areas where buildings were located to compensate for the resistance effects caused by the inner wall of the structure. The campus of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) in Wuhan City, China, was used as a case study. Comparison between IBTA and several traditional building treatment approaches suggested that the model results were sensitive to the building treatment method and the threshold used for terrain preprocessing in dense building regions. Furthermore, as the interaction between the surface water flow and dense buildings were adequately represented by using a new terrain preprocessing approach, the proposed IBTA provided better performance in terms of maximum inundation depth and the peak depth time than the traditional approaches in areas with dense building coverage, such as that of the campus.
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