In September 2024, Hurricane Helene made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane and quickly became the deadliest hurricane in the United States since Hurricane Katrina. It brought catastrophic flooding, storm surge, landslides, and tornadoes, resulting in more than 250 deaths and $78.7 billion in damages, which some estimate may rise to $110 billion. Areas of Western North Carolina and Eastern Tennessee were devastated by the rainfall it brought, and Southwest Virginia experienced significant flooding.听听
鈥淔looding is a growing issue across local communities,鈥 said , who leads George Mason 麻豆国产鈥檚 . 鈥淚t is one part of engineering that鈥檚 not well-solved. Communities want to understand and adapt to flood risk, but it鈥檚 expensive. If it were easy and cheap, it would already be solved. That鈥檚 where this idea came in鈥攚e thought, why not involve students? Not just teach them engineering but help them create useful products for these communities. Can we make a difference without a multimillion-dollar firm? Can we bridge the gap?鈥听

Ferreira recently redesigned the CEIE 445/645 Flood Hazard Engineering and Adaptation course to work with community partners to deliver real projects as part of the. 听He taught it for the first time in its new format in fall 2024 and plans to offer it again this fall.听
In CEIE 445/645, a course for civil engineering students, undergraduate and graduate students work together on teams to develop flood risk maps and conduct analyses to help real clients in local communities improve their flood resilience. For some communities, especially smaller counties or tribes with fewer resources or no engineers on staff, this can provide critical data to help them address areas at higher risk of flooding.听
The student teams used the recently developed Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) models, which provided ground elevation surface (topography), hydraulic friction values, and surface water infiltration values. This served as a common framework each project could be built upon.听

During the first part of the semester, the students learned how to create models like those provided by Virginia DCR. Then, they worked with their clients to address individual case studies on flood mitigation.听听
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 transformational for the students,鈥 Ferreira said. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad we鈥檙e able to do that. At the beginning, they wonder what they鈥檝e gotten themselves into, but by then end, they鈥檙e proud of the projects they built. [This challenge] really captures their attention, and they get enthusiastic about it.鈥听
Examples of student projects include:听听
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Pamunkey Reservation Flood Resiliency Plan - Located on a peninsula east of Richmond, the reservation is just slightly above sea level, increasing its risk of tidal and pluvial (surface water) flooding. The student team鈥擩acob Ryan Tomechko, Amanda Mullen, Paul Pacheco, Angela Haines-Perez, and Heriberto Perez鈥攈elped identify potential problem spots for roadway flooding including scenarios to address sea-level rise and significant storm events such as hurricanes.听
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Forwarding Roadway Resiliency Efforts in Mathews County 鈥 Matthews County is located on Virginia鈥檚 middle peninsula and is at risk of coastal and pluvial flooding due to its low-lying roadways. The student team鈥擬atthew Cantos, Daniel Cardona, Mike DeCarlo, Eglal Salih, and Allyson Skahen鈥攁ssessed which areas were at a higher risk of flooding due to poorly designed drainage ditches or other characteristics.听
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Flood Adaptive Roadways in Quantico, Virginia 鈥 Located in Prince William County, the Town of Quantico is near the Potomac River and Quantico Creek. The student team鈥擲ebastian Galarza, Marcos Sanchez, Roberto Mejia, and Gabby Wade鈥攈elped the town assess roadway flooding scenarios to inform future evacuation efforts.听听
As part of their work, the student teams created ArcGIS storymaps for each project, available through .听
After the course, several students were hired as undergraduate research assistants to continue working on the projects so that they could take them beyond one semester鈥檚 work and provide the clients with more advanced projects. They are reviewing and enhancing all the projects to improve alignment with the clients鈥 requests and developing a standardized product that each client will receive.听
One client was interested in using the student maps and analysis to assist with their proposal for funding to address these flooding issues. This is one way Ferreira sees clients being able to use the student projects. He explained that when communities apply for a grant to hire an engineering company for a project, they need to do preliminary analysis as part of this proposal. Many communities don鈥檛 have this capacity鈥攖hey don鈥檛 have engineers to do preliminary analysis.听
Ferreira worked with a graduate research assistant, two post-docs, and a PhD student over the summer of 2024 to redesign the course. 鈥淭he funding from the ART program made it possible. It provided the resources to adapt the course in this way. It was key to have those resources, because it was a huge undertaking that couldn鈥檛 be done by one faculty member alone.鈥澨听
The goal of the NSF ART program is to translate science from the university to real solutions for local communities that can help them better prepare for climate-related disasters. The ISE and Virginia Climate Center (VCC) are collaborating with the 麻豆国产 of Kentucky and the Center for Climate Strategies on the NSF ART initiative to close this gap and help communities in Virginia improve their resilience.听
CEIE 445/645 will be offered in the fall 2025 semester, and applications are still open for local communities to participate as clients.听
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