The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reveals the root cause of the failed levee system: itself

by Mondolithic Studios Mondolithic Studios

See an animated movie illustrating New Orleans's latest stormproofing strategy here.

Inside a sprawling warehouse on the outskirts of Vicksburg, Mississippi, a 15,000-square-foot model of New Orleans is getting very, very wet. Since February, researchers with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have been re-creating Hurricane Katrina´s wrath in miniature. Their goal has been to emulate the size and speed of the storm´s waves to understand why the levees crumbled and how to fortify them against future storms.

One startling finding, revealed in a 6,000-page tome released in June, is that nearly two thirds of the flooding could have been prevented had the Corps simply fortified the weak soil conditions that ultimately caused the levees to collapse. Since then, the Corps has installed â€T-walls†around the levees that will bolster them against smaller storms, yet its long-term defense plan for Katrina-style nightmares, illustrated here, could be at least another decade, and potentially billions of dollars, away from
completion.

Rebuild the
Barrier Islands


Deployment: 2017 at the earliest

Cost: Undetermined

Probably the most ambitious arm of the Army Corps´s long-term defense plan begins 85 miles east of New Orleans in the Gulf of Mexico. An archipelago of uninhabited barrier islands, the Chandeleurs, would be fortified with sediment to weaken the storm surge long before it reached the city limits.

Install Sea Gates

Deployment: 2017 at the earliest

Cost: $500 million to $1 billion

Another proposal is to resurrect an idea first put forward in the 1960s: Insert a pair of navigable sea gates (think Panama Canalâ€size locks) between Lake Pontchartrain and the Gulf of Mexico. Even if a storm surge overtopped the barrier islands, the
sea gates would minimize the flow of floodwaters entering the lake.

Fortify Levees with T-Walls

Deployment: June
Cost: $85 million

The Katrina simulations revealed that it wasn´t the pounding waves that toppled the levees, as experts had assumed. Most of the levees withstood the hurricane´s initial volley, only to collapse when water cascading down their dry side eroded the soil around their foundations. The discovery of this â€scouring effect†led to another fix:
Replace weaker sections of levees with inverted T-walls that form a scoop at ground level to channel water away from their foundations.

Create Floodwalls

Deployment: July

Cost: $150 million

Perhaps the simplest and most immediately feasible of all the defense options are retractable floodwalls positioned where the 17th Street Canal meets Lake Pontchartrain. The gates should reduce wave energy by 20
percent-enough to give the
levees a fighting chance.

Want to learn more about breakthroughs in electronics, medicine, nanotech, and more?
Subscribe to Popular Science and enter to win $5,000!

0 Comments



Download Our iPhone App

Stay up to date on the latest news of the future of science and technology from your iPhone with full articles, images and offline viewing



Follow Us On Twitter

Featuring every article from the magazine and website, plus links from around the Web. Also see our PopSci DIY feed



Become a Fan On Facebook

Share links with friends, comment on stories and more


December 2009: Best of What's New

In our December issue, Popular Science names the 100 best innovations of the year: bombproof wallpaper, self-parking cars, the fastest helicopter, and 97 more. Plus inventor profiles and videos.

Check out the best of what's new here.

Popular Science Photo Pool


Share your photos in the Pop Sci pool at www.flickr.com!
tags_sprite.png
POP_embeddedForm_cover_May09.jpg