Zürcher Nachrichten - Spain urged to 'build differently' after deadly floods

EUR -
AED 3.884112
AFN 71.842118
ALL 98.407086
AMD 418.382827
ANG 1.904052
AOA 963.334412
ARS 1067.478686
AUD 1.623901
AWG 1.903443
AZN 1.794796
BAM 1.958538
BBD 2.133071
BDT 126.246464
BGN 1.956411
BHD 0.398584
BIF 3121.236582
BMD 1.057468
BND 1.420018
BOB 7.300169
BRL 6.385836
BSD 1.056472
BTN 89.209273
BWP 14.432105
BYN 3.456816
BYR 20726.374841
BZD 2.129466
CAD 1.481317
CDF 3034.93376
CHF 0.930842
CLF 0.037478
CLP 1034.140336
CNY 7.650887
CNH 7.658232
COP 4672.105578
CRC 539.56184
CUC 1.057468
CUP 28.022905
CVE 110.418819
CZK 25.269241
DJF 188.132077
DKK 7.45773
DOP 63.790069
DZD 141.199473
EGP 52.443864
ERN 15.862022
ETB 130.882601
FJD 2.394689
FKP 0.834678
GBP 0.832144
GEL 2.89217
GGP 0.834678
GHS 16.322738
GIP 0.834678
GMD 75.080256
GNF 9104.941928
GTQ 8.151355
GYD 220.957805
HKD 8.230142
HNL 26.729741
HRK 7.543194
HTG 138.506876
HUF 412.898464
IDR 16772.290106
ILS 3.849248
IMP 0.834678
INR 89.364933
IQD 1383.927878
IRR 44492.970492
ISK 144.893869
JEP 0.834678
JMD 166.453452
JOD 0.750064
JPY 158.647184
KES 137.20659
KGS 91.788017
KHR 4258.052472
KMF 493.30267
KPW 951.720893
KRW 1475.400294
KWD 0.325034
KYD 0.880426
KZT 541.033686
LAK 23186.299635
LBP 94605.890573
LKR 307.107816
LRD 189.636863
LSL 19.197844
LTL 3.122429
LVL 0.639652
LYD 5.15418
MAD 10.572328
MDL 19.343947
MGA 4932.871728
MKD 61.53198
MMK 3434.615153
MNT 3593.276561
MOP 8.468597
MRU 42.144104
MUR 49.119565
MVR 16.338205
MWK 1831.951998
MXN 21.578747
MYR 4.695418
MZN 67.578562
NAD 19.197844
NGN 1782.298545
NIO 38.87581
NOK 11.677213
NPR 142.73754
NZD 1.787109
OMR 0.40711
PAB 1.056477
PEN 3.964216
PGK 4.260055
PHP 62.008341
PKR 293.695632
PLN 4.306043
PYG 8239.477991
QAR 3.850864
RON 4.977182
RSD 116.973946
RUB 114.292913
RWF 1470.58336
SAR 3.972643
SBD 8.872782
SCR 14.656082
SDG 636.066778
SEK 11.529083
SGD 1.416288
SHP 0.834678
SLE 24.005957
SLL 22174.582418
SOS 603.74104
SRD 37.439649
STD 21887.454736
SVC 9.243877
SYP 2656.920186
SZL 19.205755
THB 36.205626
TJS 11.515605
TMT 3.711713
TND 3.337349
TOP 2.476694
TRY 36.684071
TTD 7.179001
TWD 34.363523
TZS 2791.715446
UAH 43.936406
UGX 3898.430702
USD 1.057468
UYU 45.25304
UZS 13590.224998
VES 49.951568
VND 26803.115301
VUV 125.544738
WST 2.952018
XAF 656.872054
XAG 0.034496
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.857861
XDR 0.808126
XOF 656.872054
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.287735
ZAR 19.09439
ZMK 9518.473671
ZMW 28.497699
ZWL 340.504298
  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

Spain urged to 'build differently' after deadly floods
Spain urged to 'build differently' after deadly floods / Photo: JOSE JORDAN - AFP

Spain urged to 'build differently' after deadly floods

Spain is racing to reconstruct areas devastated by deadly floods last month but experts have urged a rethink of development with the relocation of buildings away from vulnerable areas.

Text size:

The worst floods to hit Spain in decades on October 29 killed at least 230 people, covered towns in mud and debris, destroyed bridges, roads and rail lines and submerged cars, mainly in the eastern region of Valencia.

"The degree of destruction and ruin was historic" in the Valencia region, where some 80 towns were hit by torrential rains, according to a report from Spain's Higher Council of Colleges of Architects.

Reconstruction must "be carried out with empathy, technical rigour and a great deal of responsibility," said its president Marta Vall-Llossera.

"With global warming making meteorological phenomena more intense and more frequent, architecture will have an important role to play," she told AFP.

"We're going to have to build differently," she added, recommending a return to "the traditional, compact Mediterranean city".

In Spain's third-largest city Valencia, the regional capital, land has become increasingly built up, making it more vulnerable to flooding since concrete prevents the ground from absorbing water.

In the Valencia suburb of Paiporta, epicentre of the disaster, roads were quickly transformed into torrents of mud that swept away everything in their path.

"We must try to re-naturalise cities, reduce the use of cars, make the cobblestones less hard, more permeable, and better able to withstand the intense heat and torrential rain," said Vall-Llossera.

- 'Forced expropriation' -

A flood risk prevention plan was approved in the Valencia region in 2003 but it is not binding and has no "retroactive effects", said Maria Jesus Romero Aloy, an expert in urban planning law at Valencia's Polytechnic University.

Valencia accounts for just five percent of Spain's territory which is at risk of flooding but has seen 20 percent of the heavy rainfall events recorded over the past decade in the country, according to the plan.

The highest risk of flooding is concentrated in 12 percent of the region -- home to the popular beach resort of Benidorm -- and affects 600,000 people.

In this area, the authorities recommend homes have watertight windows and an internal staircase with roof access to allow for an escape from flash flooding.

But Romero Aloy said there has to be a "rethinking the territorial model and considering removing buildings or installations that face a high risk" of flooding.

Property owners are currently allowed to rebuild on flooded land even in a high-risk zone.

The only way to prevent this is through a "forced expropriation" as happened in 2019 in Onteniente, a municipality some 85 kilometres (50 miles) south of Valencia.

There "a neighbourhood was eliminated" and turned into a floodway, a channel reserved for floodwaters to pass through, said Romero Aloy.

- 'Natural barriers' -

Mayors, however, are "reluctant to expropriate" because it is a "complicated political decision", especially when the country faces a housing shortage, she added.

But a month after the floods "there is a growing awareness among decision-makers," said Federico Jesus Bonet Zapater, an expert in civil engineering, canals and ports who advises the regional government of Valencia.

"Projects to build dams or divert canals, which have been on the table for some time, are finally going to be studied," he added.

Rafael Delgado Artes, an expert in regional planning and risk prevention, recommends creating "natural barriers" such as forests to minimise the damage from floods and "artificial riverbeds to divert rivers away from city centres".

In the centre of Valencia, which was spared the October disaster, the river that runs through the city was diverted after devastating floods in 1957 and in its place stands a popular urban park.

B.Brunner--NZN