Driven in part by the imminent threats of population growth and climate destabilization, recent studies suggest that urban areas face severe water scarcity, with some areas in Australia and the United States already instituting moratoria on water use. While water managers traditionally avoid such crises by developing demand forecasts based on population estimates, technological developments, and weather predictions, their analysis are often at a regional scale with aggregate measures of water consumption. To date, there exists limited empirical evidence about how urban spatial structure and concomitant socio-demographic and temperature characteristics mutually interact to affect water demand at the scale of individual land uses. In this pre...
The water resources system is constantly evolving over space and time at a range of scales. Human-in...
Smart cities need a sustainable plan and management of urban water consumption (UWC). A reliable lon...
abstract: Largely because water resource planning in the U.S. has been separated from land-use plann...
As urban areas continue to expand, sustainable urban water resource management has become an importa...
We investigated the impacts of long-term climate variability and change on per capita water demand i...
Problem, research strategy, and findings: Cities across the United States must have reliable and con...
A growing body of literature examines urban water sustainability with increasing evidence that local...
The sensitivity of municipal water consumption to climate and weather variability is investigated fo...
Graduation date: 2015A growing body of literature exists on how human population growth and changes ...
Water scarcity afflicts societies worldwide. Anticipating water shortages is vital because of water’...
As global populations grow and climate becomes more extreme, cities in drought prone regions of the ...
abstract: This study addresses a classic sustainability challenge—the tradeoff between water conserv...
While the negative effects of urban development on freshwater systems are well documented, impacts o...
Cities in drought prone regions of the world such as South East Australia are faced with escalating ...
With growing urban populations and increasing concerns over the effects of climate change on water s...
The water resources system is constantly evolving over space and time at a range of scales. Human-in...
Smart cities need a sustainable plan and management of urban water consumption (UWC). A reliable lon...
abstract: Largely because water resource planning in the U.S. has been separated from land-use plann...
As urban areas continue to expand, sustainable urban water resource management has become an importa...
We investigated the impacts of long-term climate variability and change on per capita water demand i...
Problem, research strategy, and findings: Cities across the United States must have reliable and con...
A growing body of literature examines urban water sustainability with increasing evidence that local...
The sensitivity of municipal water consumption to climate and weather variability is investigated fo...
Graduation date: 2015A growing body of literature exists on how human population growth and changes ...
Water scarcity afflicts societies worldwide. Anticipating water shortages is vital because of water’...
As global populations grow and climate becomes more extreme, cities in drought prone regions of the ...
abstract: This study addresses a classic sustainability challenge—the tradeoff between water conserv...
While the negative effects of urban development on freshwater systems are well documented, impacts o...
Cities in drought prone regions of the world such as South East Australia are faced with escalating ...
With growing urban populations and increasing concerns over the effects of climate change on water s...
The water resources system is constantly evolving over space and time at a range of scales. Human-in...
Smart cities need a sustainable plan and management of urban water consumption (UWC). A reliable lon...
abstract: Largely because water resource planning in the U.S. has been separated from land-use plann...