Prague’s flexible floodwall

2008.July.7

floodwall in kampa district of prague


NyTimes Article: Prague’s emergency floodwalls held up during Summer 2002 floods. From the article:

“I thank God and the wall,” said Rabbi Sidon as he looked up at his temporary sanctuary, the 19th-century Jerusalem Synagogue. The wall, which rescue workers named the Wall of Hope, is a fence of interlocking aluminum slats that was hurriedly put into place on the bank of the Vltava as floodwaters began to rise on Monday.


By today, the local tabloid Blesk had crowned its builder, a Moravian businessman named Ladislav Srubek, as “the man who saved Prague.” Foundations for the $2,000,000 wall, designed by a German firm after floods hit the city of Cologne a decade ago, were put in place several years ago. “It’s not a miracle, it’s just a smart piece of engineering,” Mr. Srubek said in a telephone interview. He said plans and permits had been in place to extend the wall to other parts of the city, but it had not been a
priority for the local government.

The substantial costs of flood walls can be justified by the value of commercial property thus protected from damage caused by flooding. Flood walls are almost solely used in cities, notably:

  • Cologne, Germany
  • Nijmegen, the Netherlands
  • Deventer, the Netherlands
  • Kampen, the Netherlands
  • Huntington, West Virginia
  • Portsmouth, Ohio
  • St. Louis, Missouri
  • Louisville, Kentucky
  • Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Morgan City, Louisiana
  • New Orleans, Louisiana and
  • Richmond, Virginia.
  • Williamson, West Virginia
  • South Williamson, Kentucky

cologne river park


Harris Riverfront Park in Huntington, WV

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