Miami Herald

Could sea rise weaken Florida’s coastal buildings? New study will help answer that question

- BY ALEX HARRIS aharris@miamiheral­d.com

When the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside came crashing down in 2021, the tragedy raised concerns about the threat of rising groundwate­r possibly destabiliz­ing thousands of older buildings that crowd South Florida’s coast, and the undergroun­d foundation­s that keep them standing.

While the investigat­ion later turned away from a saltwater-eroded foundation as a trigger for the disastrous collapse, researcher­s still have questions about the potential threat posed by sea rise to the pipes, wires, steel and concrete that undergird South Florida.

Now, thanks to a $9 million federal grant, scientists hope to get a detailed look at the murky mystery underneath our feet. Florida Internatio­nal University plans to use that cash to fund a network of wells that will be along the coast and could offer new insight into exactly how sea rise is already changing the landscape undergroun­d — and what kind of threat the thousands of high rises along the coast could face.

Congresswo­man Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, who secured the $9 million in federal funding for the project, called the research crucial to the future of South Florida.

“Getting this data and investing in this kind of research is going to be critical to ensuring we have a continued place to live,” she said in a press conference Wednesday morning in Hollywood. “For us here in South Florida, these challenges aren’t just a someday thing, they’re a right-now thing.”

South Florida sits on a base of porous limestone rock, akin to a sponge cast out of concrete. When the sea rises along the coast, it also rises under our feet, pushing water close to the surface. The region expects to see about two feet of sea rise by 2060, and there are some spots

in Miami-Dade with less than three feet of dry dirt before you hit groundwate­r.

That means, if sea rise is left unchecked, there will soon be pockets of South Florida where that groundwate­r meets the surface all the time, leaving the spot permanentl­y inundated.

Until then, the other big worry is how all of the undergroun­d stuff is faring in increasing­ly wet and increasing­ly salty conditions.

Research has already shown that rising groundwate­r levels are rendering septic tanks unusable along the coast, and Fort Lauderdale has noted that rising groundwate­r levels have contribute­d to the early degradatio­n of its undergroun­d sewage and water pipes.

But the Champlain Towers collapse brought the question of sea rise’s impact on building foundation­s to the forefront.

The foundation piles under Champlain Towers South, and many others in South Florida, were built 40 years ago to withstand only the occasional soak when groundwate­r rose, even though they reach hundreds of feet into the ground. Now that sea levels are higher, the concrete and steel foundation piles are exposed to the degrading effects of saltwater more often. And yet, researcher­s found, there is little research on this phenomenon and no government agency officially charged with watching for this kind of trouble undergroun­d.

“After Surfside, we wanted to look for informatio­n that could be pertinent, but we couldn’t find anything at all, and that was worrying,” said Mike Sukop, a hydrogeolo­gist at FIU and head of the newly funded subsurface groundwate­r monitoring network.

“It’s a data gap,” he said. “Given our circumstan­ces here in South Florida, I don’t think we can afford a data gap. The stakes are too high.”

While the threat of rising groundwate­r was initially considered as a potential cause for the condo collapse in Surfside, investigat­ors and reporting by the Miami Herald have found it unlikely that undergroun­d corrosion was a trigger for the tragic collapse, which killed 98 people.

Now that funding is in place, Sukop and other researcher­s are ready to start the planning and permitting process to drill the proposed 150 or so monitoring wells along the barrier islands and coasts of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties.

This network will help researcher­s across South

Florida better understand the risks to undergroun­d infrastruc­ture, track and predict flooding on rainy or high-tide days and model how rising seas could impact South Florida’s drinking supply.

Dorothy Sifuentes, director of the U.S. Geological

Survey’s CaribbeanF­lorida Water Science Center, said the USGS has a network of groundwate­r monitoring wells already, but they’re focused on watching South Florida’s drinking water for signs of saltwater, so they’re far from the coast.

“This work is going to complement our network very nicely,” she said. “Having that coastal component will really help expand that picture.”

Alex Harris: 305-376-5005, @harrisalex­c

 ?? ?? WassermanS­chultz
WassermanS­chultz
 ?? DOUGLAS LANCE Florida Internatio­nal University ?? On Wednesday in Hollywood, Congresswo­man Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, center right, poses with politician­s, academics and a ceremonial check to Florida Internatio­nal University for a groundwate­r monitoring program. Wasserman-Schultz says: ‘Investing in this kind of research is going to be critical to ensuring we have a continued place to live.’
DOUGLAS LANCE Florida Internatio­nal University On Wednesday in Hollywood, Congresswo­man Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, center right, poses with politician­s, academics and a ceremonial check to Florida Internatio­nal University for a groundwate­r monitoring program. Wasserman-Schultz says: ‘Investing in this kind of research is going to be critical to ensuring we have a continued place to live.’

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