Abstract Description: Similar to many cities in the United States, the City of Newark, the largest in New Jersey, owns and operates several reservoirs in a highland region to provide clean drinking water to its residences. The City of Newark initiated a dam safety project on its inventory of dams, in which GZA was contracted to provide engineering services. While this project encompassed a comprehensive suite of services, this presentation will focus on GZA’s H&H analyses which included hydrological modeling and calibration in the software HEC-HMS, and incremental damage analyses, spillway and channel adequacy evaluation, and dam break hydraulic modeling in the software HEC-RAS. Newark’s inventory of dams, including six high hazard dams, presented unique logistical and H&H challenges due to their hydrological interconnectivity, the presence of fifteen dams in total in the watershed, large modeling extents, and unique hydraulic conditions such as spillway submergence at some of the dams and major inflows from river confluences in downstream areas. GZA will explore the logistical and H&H approaches that emerged including but not limited to discretizing the project area to balance between runtime and needed accuracy, phasing H&H tasks, and checking differences between HEC-HMS and HEC-RAS results. The presentation will discuss how the project team adapted to challenges presented by modeling Newark’s complex dam system, and provide lessons learned for future large-scale modeling.
Learning Objectives:
Demonstrate the challenges and solutions associated with H&H modeling large-scale, interconnected dam systems.
Identify practices and techniques for future H&H modeling of large-scale, interconnected dam systems.
Learn about the dams and water system maintained by the City of Newark, New Jersey, to provide clean water.