Software, Mapping Method Yield Real-time And Two-dimensional Flood Models
As an environmental engineering undergraduate nearly a decade ago, Robert Chlumsky, now a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Engineering, forged a professional relationship with his professors, Dr. James Craig and Dr. Bryan Tolson.
It was fostering that relationship and the research it produced that resulted in the trio receiving funding for Blackbird, a software and a new method for floodplain mapping that could potentially impact flood mitigation and response.
Blackbird secured $15,000 in funding through Up Start, a program created by Velocity and Waterloo Commercialization Office (WatCo) for student researchers, founders and recent alums who are transforming their research into commercial ventures. The program provides access to funding and collaboration with advisers.
Chlumsky, alongside Tolson and Craig, professors in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, is developing the technology. The Up Start funding will facilitate research validation, potentially growing their team and building an online portal for the platform.
Robert Chlumsky, James Craig, and Bryan Tolson
L-r: Robert Chlumsky, James Craig, and Bryan Tolson.
Unlike the ones currently in use today, Blackbird’s flood maps will be both real-time and two-dimensional, facilitating more effective emergency response to flood events.
“If authorities can do a better job responding to and managing flood events as they occur, both in real-time and understanding the potential impact in land development, it could lead to real reductions in cost and risk to life,” Chlumsky said.
Craig, who also holds a Canada Research Chair in hydrologic modelling and analysis, said authorities are currently using outdated information, in some cases developed decades ago.
“A lot of maps being used were developed in the ‘70s and ‘80s, most of which are out of date simply because climate is changing and there’s changing frequency of large flow events that lead to flooding,” Craig said. “This is a critical problem for engineers who are trying to deal with any predictions about water flow and flooding.”
Chlumsky said while Blackbird’s technology will apply to conservation authorities, government and industry, the maps could eventually reach general consumers to give them a better understanding of their own flood risk when buying or assessing their property.
Blackbird and nine other ventures are the first to work with Up Start and receive funding for transforming their research into commercial ventures.