Hamburg’s Stadium Storing Rainwater Underground

Robert C. Brears
Mark and Focus
Published in
3 min readJul 29, 2020

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Hamburg Wasser is building an underground storage and infiltration system under a stadium to prevent localised flooding as part of Project RISA.

By Robert C. Brears

The City of Hamburg, in partnership with Hamburg Wasser and the State Ministry for Urban Development and Environment (BSU), has devised The Rain InfraStructure Adaptation project (Project RISA). Project RISA aims to develop adequate responses to stormwater management to avoid flooding of streets and properties as well as reduce water pollution from sewer overflow and street runoff. Implementation has been allocated to a number of interdisciplinary working groups from the areas of environmental/sanitary engineering, urban and landscape planning, traffic planning and waterbody planning.

Multifunctional spaces

A key aspect of Project RISA is that it encourages multifunctional spaces including streets, parking spaces, green spaces, sports grounds, and playgrounds for short-term retention and/or transportation of runoff peaks during extreme precipitation events. However, they will not be used for every extreme weather event. The use of public spaces will be limited to once-every-five-year events and streets once-every-ten-year events. Therefore, the use of multifunctional spaces is not the rule but the exception. In addition, multifunctional spaces will be individually designed considering the extent to which each area is potentially at risk of flooding and the intensity of use.

Hamburg’s multifunctional sports stadium

Hamburg Wasser is building an underground storage and infiltration system under the Hein Klink Stadium in Billstedt to prevent localised flooding as part of Project RISA. In the event of heavy rain, the excess water will flow in the future through a newly laid channel over a settling shaft into the trenches under the Hein Klink Stadium.

In the first step of construction, trenches were built under the sports field to absorb excess water and gradually release it to the ground. In the next construction step, excess water will be led from the street to the sports field via a siel (a lockable culvert) which has a diameter of 50 centimetres and is 75 metres long. On its way, the water will pass through a settling shaft. There, sand, tyre debris and other solids will be deposited on the floor and the roughly cleaned rainwater will then flow onto the sports field. Once the system is completed, the new surfaces on the sports field will be applied. In total, the system will be able to absorb more than 500,000 litres of water during a heavy rainfall event.

The take-out

Cities can retrofit public spaces to store excess stormwater underground.

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Robert C. Brears
Mark and Focus

Robert is the author of Financing Water Security and Green Growth (Oxford University Press) and Founder of Our Future Water and Mark and Focus