Title: Dampness, Flooding, and the Effect on Occupant Health
1Dampness, Flooding, and the Effect on Occupant
Health
- Linking Building Physics, GIS, and Epidemiology
- Height and Flights Conference, Oxford
- July 8th, 2009
- Jonathon Taylor
- Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geomatic
Engineering, UCL - The Bartlett School of Graduate Studies
2Study Background
- Background
- London will experience an increase in flooding
(and indeed, intensity of moisture) due to
climate change - Different buildings will be flooded to different
heights - Certain wall types absorb and desorb moisture in
different ways - People react to flooding and dampness in their
homes differently - Research Questions
- Under natural circumstances, how long will the
city take to dry? What about under different
drying scenarios? - What sociodemographic groups will be exposed to
high levels of damp? Will this cause an increase
in chronic damp-related health issues? - How does the length of exposure to damp effect
the health of previous flood victims? - How long will temporary accommodation need to be
provided for victims? - What are the natural microbial fauna that exist
in flooded London buildings, and how might this
effect the health of the population?
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4Flooding has a range of health implications
- Acute Problems
- Drowning
- Trauma
- Electrocution
- Poisoning/Disease
- Chronic Problems
- Increase in all-cause deaths in year following
flooding (50, Bristol, 1969) - Mental health (Social Flood Vulnerability Index)
- Dampness and Mould related symptoms
- Asthma
- Respiratory diseases
- Toxic building syndrome
5Flooding has a range of health implications
- Acute Problems
- Drowning
- Trauma
- Electrocution
- Poisoning/Disease
- Chronic Problems
- Increase in all-cause deaths in year following
flooding (50, Bristol, 1969) - Mental health (Social Flood Vulnerability Index)
- Dampness and Mould related symptoms
- Asthma
- Respiratory diseases
- Toxic building syndrome
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7Research Area Greater London
- OS Mastermap building shapefiles
- Cities Revealed building age and type
- Address Layer 2 to identify residential buildings
8Research Area Greater London
- Cities Revealed LiDAR provides height data
- Heights used to create DTM
- Determine building heights
9Environment Agency Data 1/200 Flood Map
10GIS Data Describes
Dwellings, Dwellings in a building, of
premises in building
Age of Buildings
Structure of Buildings
Height of flooding for buildings
11Building Physics
- An applied science that studies the hygrothermal,
acoustical, and light-related properties of
building components, rooms, buildings, and
building assemblies (Hens, 2008) - Hygrothermal Heat, air, and moisture transport
in materials, components and buildings, and
buildings and the outdoor environment - Interested in
- Water Content The amount of water (kg/m3) of
water in the wall - Relative Humidity The amount of water vapour in
the air, relative to the total amount the air
could hold (saturation) at a specific temperature - Crucial for mould growth
12Assumptions can be made about walls from age and
structure
Supplemented by data from English Housing
Condition Survey and the Census
13Flood Models in Different Wall Types
9 Masonry wall with 1cm plaster
Cavity wall with mineral wool insulation and 1cm
plaster
14Wall Types and Moisture
- Sensitivity analysis shows
- Drying time is dependent on wall type, flood
height, wall orientation, time of year of flood - Less sensitivity to wall coverings (render, wall
paper)
15How to integrate GIS and building moisture models
- Each moisture calculation takes up to 20 minutes
- Unrealistic to do for the 305,000 buildings in
the study area - More efficient to create curves for drying time
and relative humidity - Can be based on depth-damage curves used by the
insurance industry
16Next Steps
- Generate curves for range of flood heights, wall
types, climate and drying scenarios - Apply the curves to past events and future flood
scenarios - Apply epidemiological models for dampness
exposure to examine chronic respiratory disease - Use as level and length of exposure indicator for
chronic health studies - Apply mould growth model to moisture model
17Finally
- Flooding is a good place to start
- 3D model, but basically 2D1
- Defined moisture levels, all or none saturation
levels, no roof shapes required - More may be possible in the future
- Intensity of rainfall is expected to increase
- City models are becoming more detailed, with roof
shapes - Building stock information is improving
- Potentially research impact of climate change on
existing building stock, and health consequences
from this.
18Conclusion
- Known chronic health impacts from dampness and
flooding, but no length or level of exposure
information - Building Physics and GIS can help bridge the gaps
in epidemiological models - Building attribute and height data is crucial to
be able to do this