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ANTONIO FRANCIPANE

The potential of multilayer green roofs for stormwater management in urban area under semi-arid Mediterranean climate conditions

Abstract

Different low impact development measures have been proposed to make cities more flood-resilient, and recent literature is paying great attention to the evaluation of their direct benefits in terms of flood risk mitigation and the numerous co-benefits that they may offer. This study describes an experimental prototype of a technologically advanced multilayer green roof installed in a Mediterranean urban area (i.e., Palermo, Italy) and explores the results of an analysis of data collected over a one-year monitoring period by a complex sensors network. Multilayer green roofs, or “blue-green” roofs (BGRs), are characterized by a high water retention capacity compared to traditional green roofs due to the presence of an additional storage layer (blue layer), usually equipped with a valve that allows for regulating discharge outflow and water storage. Due to their recent development, BGRs are still scarcely explored in literature and have never been tested before in semi-arid environments, where they could represent valid measures to counter possible climate change and growing urbanization effects. In this study, the hydrological effectiveness of the experimental BGR is quantitatively evaluated by using appropriate indicators, based on the comparison between the hydrological response of the system and an equal size benchmark “grey” roof. The analyses are prevalently focused on the system's stormwater retention function, also investigating the relative contributions of the green layer and the storage layer to the overall retention capacity through the introduction of new BGRs specific indicators. Results emphasize the high impact of storms characteristics, antecedent soil moisture of the green layer, and initial water storage in the blue layer on the system's retention capacity. The overall mean retention rate for the experimental BGR, on average equal to 77% at the daily scale and 61% at the event scale, is comparable to the typical values of traditional extensive green roofs and could be further improved through a “retention-oriented” management of the outflow valve. The system was able to entirely retain almost half of the rainfall events occurred during the monitoring period and, for all the others, it was however extremely effective in reducing runoff peaks and delaying the hydrograph produced.