Hashash selected to joint NEER, GEER team to investigate hurricane impacts

10/11/2024

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Youssef Hashash
Youssef Hashash

Youssef Hashash, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Grainger Distinguished Chair in Engineering and John Burkitt Webb Endowed Faculty Scholar, has been selected as part of the joint hurricane reconnaissance team from Nearshore Extreme Events Reconnaissance (NEER) Association and from the Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance (GEER) Association, supported by the National Science Foundation. They will investigate the impacts of storm surge and waves and resulting sediment erosion and deposition, debris transport and accumulation from Hurricanes Helene and Milton through pre-storm, during-storm, and post-storm field data collection. Measurements and observations will be conducted in the nearshore and in coastal environments of the central to northern Florida west coast with focus areas including Cedar Key and Horseshoe Beach.

The team has been mobilized to collect data to improve the understanding, prediction, and mitigation of erosion and scour and impacts thereof during severe tropical storm events from storm surge, inundation, and wave action. Specifically, the uniqueness of this opportunity lies within the fact that pre- and during-storm data was collected throughout a Cat 4 and 4m storm surge event. Data will be shared widely through NSF NHERI DesignSafe-CI. Data will also be shared with local communities and parties of interest to increase awareness and understanding of risk assessments.

Dr. Hashash was interviewed by local news organization, WCIA, as he was traveling down to Florida to join the team. He explained the focus of the research and how he hopes it will positively impact communities in the future, adding that the information will "cumulatively end up helping with delivering better infrastructure, making our structures more resilient to these severe events."

Hurrican Milton
3D Render of a Topographic Map of the Gulf Of Mexico with the clouds from October 07, 2024. Category 5 Major Hurricane Milton northwest of the Yucatán peninsula heading towards Florida 

The team is composed of natural hazards research experts and practitioners from the coastal and geotechnical engineering communities. Dr. Nina Stark, an associate professor at the University of Florida (UF), Dr. Michael Gardner, an assistant professor at UC Davis, are coordinating the multi-disciplinary and multi-institutional investigation. They are joined by:

  • Dr. Maitane Olabarrieta (UF)
  • Dr. Armando Laurel-Castillo (UF)
  • Dr. Jonathan Hubler (Villanova University)
  • Dr. Weiwei Zhan (University of Central Florida)
  • Dr. Celso Castro-Bolinaga (NC State University)
  • Mr. Michael Haefeli (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
  • Dr. Alexandra Schueller (University of Delaware)
  • Brandon Quinn (ECS Florida)
  • Dr. Youssef Hashash (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)

They are furthermore supported by University of Washington Natural Hazards Engineering Research Infrastructure (NHERI) RAPID technical staff under the lead of Dr. Michael Grilliot (UW NHERI RAPID) and by the UF Center for Coastal Solutions technical field support staff under the lead of Mr. Todd Van Natta. Additionally, students from UF, Villanova University, NC State University, and Louisiana State University will join the effort. Finally, the team is supported virtually by Dr. Britt Raubenheimer (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, NEER director), Dr. David Frost (Georgia Tech, GEER director), and Dr. Navid Jafari (Louisiana State University).

The big bend coast of Florida was recently impacted by subsequent storm events including Hurricane Idalia (Cat 3; Sept 2023), Hurricane Debbie (Cat 1: July 2024), Hurricane Helene (Cat 4; Sept 2024), and upcoming Hurricane Milton (Oct 2024). It represents a series of severe storms impacting the same region within a short period of time. Hurricane Helene also stood out through a rapid intensification and last moment changes in course that allowed for limited time of warnings and storm preparation of residents, as well as through the size of the storm and landward progression with severe impacts in inland locations.

The NEER association collected detailed data quantifying storm surge and wave heights through Hurricane Helene as well as detailed topographic and aerial imagery data of the areas of Cedar Key, Suwannee, Shired Island, and Horseshoe Beach, Florida on the day before landfall, as well as bathymetric data within the previous three months. More data is being collected throughout Hurricane Milton and will be collected post-storm during the week of October 7th. This data set will be unique regarding diversity in methods, detail, and comprehensiveness to study impacts from tropical cyclones on coastal communities through detailed case studies. The results will contribute to improve risk assessment and impact prediction from tropical cyclones on coastal communities.

Additional information on GEER and NEER is available at: http://www.geerassociation.org/ and https://neerassociation.org/


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This story was published October 11, 2024.