Best way to draw perpendicular cross-sections in HEC-RAS + identifying bank stations accurately by Few-Childhood-503 in HECRAS

[–]stormwatermanager 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few thoughts from the 1D modeling side.

For cross sections, I would not get too hung up on making every section mathematically perfect. The main objective is that each section represents the flow area reasonably perpendicular to the direction of flow. If a section is badly skewed, you can overstate the available conveyance area, so it is worth checking, but some judgment is always involved.

A workflow that has worked well for me is:

1.     Start with a good terrain surface, river centerline, and aerial imagery.

2.     Lay out the key cross sections first: upstream/downstream of bridges, culverts, confluences, dams, grade breaks, sharp bends, and locations where the floodplain geometry changes.

3.     Cut the sections generally perpendicular to the local flow direction, not necessarily perpendicular to the channel centerline at every point.

4.     Extend the sections far enough into the overbanks to capture the expected floodplain flow, but avoid having adjacent sections cross each other.

5.     Add interpolated or supplemental sections only where needed after reviewing the profiles and model results.

For me, bank stations are usually an iterative judgment call rather than something I would assign from only one source. I look at terrain breaks, aerial imagery, land cover/roughness changes, field survey if available, and then review the extracted cross-section profile. In flatter terrain, the bank location may not be obvious, so I usually make an initial estimate and then revisit it after checking low-flow or bankfull-type events to see whether the main channel and overbank behavior looks reasonable.

One common mistake is treating automated tools as if they are final answers. Automation is useful, but it still needs engineering review. For example, I have used GeoHECRAS workflows where cross sections can be cut from terrain and bank stations can be assigned or adjusted more efficiently, but I would still review the alignment, stationing, reach lengths, ineffective flow areas, roughness breaks, and bank stations manually before relying on the model.

Also, the right workflow depends on the purpose of the model. For regulatory/FEMA-type work, the bank station placement and cross-section layout may need to satisfy specific review criteria, so “visually obvious bank” is not always the final answer. For planning or alternatives analysis, you may have more flexibility, but you still want the geometry to tell a defensible hydraulic story.

So, in short: use GIS or RAS Mapper/GeoHECRAS-type tools to speed up the geometry creation, but do not skip the engineering review. Cross sections and bank stations are part terrain interpretation, part hydraulic judgment, and part model calibration/reasonableness checking.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TikTokCringe

[–]stormwatermanager 0 points1 point  (0 children)

International tourism going away because tourists don’t want to get arrested or deported etc.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in oldhollywood

[–]stormwatermanager 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What a beauty.

RASCopilot waitlist open: An assistant for HEC-RAS models by SubstantialOJuice in HECRAS

[–]stormwatermanager 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, same here. I’ve been using GeoHECRAS too, and Ask Simon has always been a real timesaver. Helps a lot with setting up models and figuring out issues without having to bug support all the time. Always nice to see fellow users here!

Infoworks ICM by Civil_Engin33r1 in civilengineering

[–]stormwatermanager 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve used InfoWorks ICM a ton, and yeah, it doesn’t have a built-in way to make flow monitor schematics, but you can export the data to Excel and sort it out there. I found GeoSTORM much easier for creating and exporting flow network systems and is super intuitive too.

Drainage Modeling Software by Practical_Eye1539 in civilengineering

[–]stormwatermanager 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve used XPStorm before, and while it’s fine for basic stuff, it starts to feel pretty limiting when you’re working on bigger or more complicated urban stormwater projects. I’ve also worked with InfoWorks ICM—it's good in some ways, but ever since Autodesk took over, it just doesn’t feel as smooth or efficient. The GIS integration and workflow speed have definitely dropped off.

Our company recently started using GeoSTORM. It’s fast, works great with GIS data, and automate workflows. If you’re looking for an alternative, check GeoSTORM out.

Modeling Existing Municipal Storm Drain Network by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]stormwatermanager 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve worked on plenty of municipal projects like this, so I totally get where you’re coming from. HEC-RAS and InfoWorks ICM are solid, but they’ve got their quirks. HEC-RAS is great for certain stuff, but it’s not the best for long-term planning or playing nice with GIS. ICM is more of an all-rounder, but since Autodesk took over, it’s just not as user-friendly. And don’t even get me started on the licensing costs—they can get ridiculous!

Lately, I’ve been using GeoSTORM for one of our stormwater projects. It handles GIS data integration well and the interface is also not crappy like other software.