Water in Japan

“Underground Temple” Safeguards Greater Tokyo from Floods

Culture

The Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel was completed 10 years ago and has helped reduced flood damage around the nation’s capital on more than 100 occasions. The world-class underground flood control system not only drains rainwater from low-lying areas but has a pressure adjusting tank that, with its huge columns, has been likened to a giant underground temple.

A 6.3-Kilometer Underground River

The discharge channel is located in the city of Kasukabe. It and neighboring municipalities lie in a low plain surrounded by several large rivers—the Tone, Edo, and Arakawa. The area is like the bottom of a bowl, where rainwater accumulates easily. Another waterway flowing through the area is the Naka River, which has a gentle gradient so that water does not flow downstream quickly. It does not take much for the water level in this river to rise, and flood damage is frequent. Moreover, urbanization is spreading from the downstream regions to the middle and upper reaches of these rivers, making it more difficult to create flood control channels above ground. These factors led to the construction of one of the world’s largest underground flood control facilities.

Work began on the discharge channel in March 1993. Some sections went into operation in June 2002, and all sections were in service by June 2006.

The same intersection in Satte, Saitama Prefecture—downstream of the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel—in July 2000 (left) and October 2004 (right), before and after the Discharge Tunnel was opened. They show the flood situation after similar amounts of rainfall. (Photo provided by the Edogawa River Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism.)

The pressure adjusting tank is just one part of the discharge channel. The entire system includes five vertical silos to collect water underground and a tunnel linking them that runs 50 meters underground below Highway 16. The silos are 70 meters tall and 30 meters in diameter, and the connecting tunnel has a diameter of 10 meters and stretches for 6.3 kilometers. Four powerful pumps, which are modified versions of the gas turbines used in jetliners, discharge the water into the Edo River. The pressure adjusting tank is located between silo No. 1 and the Shōwa drainage pump station and serves to control the reverse flow generated by an emergency shutdown of the pumps.

Overall view of the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel. (Photo provided by the Edogawa River Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism.)

When a river rises during heavy rains or typhoons to the level of the lowest surrounding ground elevation, water is directed into a nearby silo. It flows into the tunnel that connects the base portion of all the silos and first accumulates there. When the tunnel is filled with water, the water level in the silos rises. If the water continues to increase, it flows into the pressure adjusting tank connected to silo number 1. The amount of water that the entire facility can contain is 670,000 cubic meters (equivalent to the volume of a 60-story skyscraper). When the water in the pressure adjusting tank reaches a predetermined level, the pumps in the drainage station begin to operate, discharging, at full operation, 200 cubic meters of water per second (equal to one 25-meter swimming pool) into the wide Edo River.


↑ Watch a video introducing the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel.

Damage Prevented Is Three Times the Cost of Construction

The total cost of building the system was ¥230 billion. This was a huge sum of money, but it is being steadily recouped through operation. The system is used eight times a year on average, and since its partial opening in 2002 has taken in water and controlled flooding 105 times (as of October 25, 2016).

During a typhoon in July 2000, torrential rainfall of 160 millimeters was recorded in the basin of the Naka and Ayase Rivers, submerging 137 hectares of land under water and flooding 248 houses. When another typhoon drenched the basin with 199 millimeters of rainfall in October 2004 after the system had partially opened, the flood area was reduced to 72 hectares and the number of flooded houses to 126. After the full system came online, a low atmospheric pressure in December 2006 (resulting in rainfall of 172 millimeters) flooded only 33 hectares of land and 85 homes.

Data published by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism shows that flood damage to houses, crops, and public facilities has been reduced by ¥48.1 billion over the 10 years since the system partially opened. If operated for 50 years, the system is projected to save ¥743.7 billion in flood damage—more than three times the cost of construction.

Upper left: Water flowing into a containment silo. Upper right: Inside the huge, 10-meter diameter underground tunnel. Bottom: Looking down into silo No. 1, which could easily house the space shuttle. The opening in the upper part of the photo is the pressure adjusting tank. (Upper two photos provided by the Edo River Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism.)

While acknowledging these actual and projected benefits, Yabe cautions that it is important not to overestimate its capacity.

“Of the eight times or so each year that rainwater drains into the tunnel, the pumps are put into operation about three times. The only times that all four pumps were running at full capacity were during two extraordinarily large typhoons in 2015. The system has tremendous flood control capacity, I think, but in the end what it protects against is the overflowing of rivers. It can’t completely prevent water damage. I hope that the people in the area will maintain a high level of awareness about disaster prevention and not be lulled into thinking that the discharge channel has made flooding a thing of the past.”

Upper left: The pressure adjusting tank can regulate water pressure when the drainage station turbine pumps are operating or are suddenly shut down. (Photo provided by the Edo River Office, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism.) Upper right. The four turbine pumps of the drainage station. Bottom left: Sluice gates that discharge water into the Edo River. Bottom right: The Edo River is wide enough to accommodate water discharged from the drainage station.

next: One of a Kind

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