A vulnerability assessment of urban emergency in schools of Shanghai

Jie Yin, Yameng Jing, Dapeng Yu, Mingwu Ye, Yuhan Yang, Banggu Liao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Schools and students are particularly vulnerable to natural hazards, especially pluvial flooding in cities. This paper presents a scenario-based study that assesses the school vulnerability of emergency services (i.e., Emergency Medical Service and Fire & Rescue Service) to urban pluvial flooding in the city center of Shanghai, China through the combination of flood hazard analysis and GIS-based accessibility mapping. Emergency coverages and response times in various traffic conditions are quantified to generate school vulnerability under normal no-flood and 100-y pluvial flood scenarios. The findings indicate that severe pluvial flooding could lead to proportionate and linear impacts on emergency response provision to schools in the city. Only 11% of all the schools is predicted to be completely unreachable (very high vulnerability) during flood emergency but the majority of the schools would experience significant delay in the travel times of emergency responses. In this case, appropriate adaptations need to be particularly targeted for specific hot-spot areas (e.g., new urbanized zones) and crunch times (e.g., rush hours).

Original languageEnglish
Article number349
JournalSustainability (Switzerland)
Volume11
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 11 Jan 2019

Keywords

  • Emergency response
  • Pluvial flooding
  • Schools and students
  • Shanghai
  • Vulnerability assessment

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