Planting forest to protect ground water and increase biodiversity
- Brugerhistorier
Across Europe, re-creating forest areas (also known as afforestation) is being used for climate mitigation, ground water protection and natural flood management.
In Denmark, for example, the Danish Nature Agency has been restoring nature so that wildlife and flora can thrive and groundwater can be protected from further contamination by pesticides and chemicals.
In the example that follows, we show how COWI’s consulting engineers use SCALGO Live to help the Danish Nature Agency design and define afforestation projects.
The project is from an 18-hectare, abandoned cornfield near the True Forest just outside the city of Aarhus. It required COWI to create realistic scenarios for bringing water from old drainage pipes back to the surface.
This meant, among other things, reforming terrain and achieving the goals of afforestation by creating natural ponds and natural surface water flow while also adhering to the legal requirement of securing continued drainage from upstream catchments.
Here is how SCALGO Live helped them do it.
Step 1: Starting from scratch
“What did we know about this area?” says Jonas Ribergaard Rasmussen, project manager at COWI.
“Not much”
“In a project like this one, we don’t always know a lot at the start – in this project we only had an old drainage map from Aarhus Municipality which gave us an idea of what could be hidden beneath the surface. Together with people from the Nature Agency, I identified all visible wells in the project area. Then I brought that data directly into SCALGO Live,” he says.
Step 2: Mapping hidden pipes
Based on the old drainage map and all identified well points, SCALGO Live helped visualise where the underground pipes were located.
This gave planners a starting point for understanding the current sub-surface flow paths and catchments.
Step 3: Understanding surface water characteristics
“The task was then to figure out where we could bring water to the surface without affecting the neighbours and without flooding their property. Also, you are not allowed to stop the free flow of water from upstream catchments, so it was important that surface water drainage was both natural and effective,” says Jonas Ribergaard Rasmussen.
The flow path analysis in SCALGO Live was used to describe natural conditions for surface water flow. As shown in the picture below, old drainage pipes follow the calculated flow paths quite well.
The flow paths were then used as a guideline for placing natural streams and ponds. Where flow paths run through forested areas, streams were re-directed. The dotted black circle shows a location where the flow paths crosses a forest, and hence, re-direction of the stream was needed.
Step 4: Imagining new scenarios
Using the terrain editing tools in SCALGO Live, COWI planners could then begin to design and visualize how surface water would flow on terrain.
While edits are made, SCALGO Live automatically computes how much soil that must be moved to create the suggested design of meandering streams and small ponds.
“Before SCALGO Live you would be working in a GIS map to get an overview, while all the data would be computed separately in an excel sheet. Every time you made one little change to depths or paths, you would have to go back and recalculate everything from the beginning. Now you can do it all in one software. And you can do it on-the-fly, which saves us a lot of time ” says Jonas Ribergaard Rasmussen.
Step 5: Communicating the results
Besides being used as a planning tool, SCALGO Live also helped communicate project ideas to clients. The advantage of interactive analyses and visualisations is that it is easy for planners to explain their findings and engage with stakeholders.
“We have had regular meetings with the client, and it has been very easy to share screens and show the stages step-by-step to get input directly so we could get it right the first time,” says Jonas Ribergaard Rasmussen.
Want to learn more?
Contact Jonas (jrra@cowi.com) or Helena (helena@scalgo.com)