golfbrekers
Golfbrekers are coastal structures built to protect shores and harbors by dissipating the energy of incoming waves before they reach the coast. The term is Dutch, and in English the equivalent is breakwater. They are designed to create calm, protected waters behind them and reduce coastal erosion and wave damage to piers, harbors, and beaches.
They can be located offshore, detached from the shore, or attached as nearshore or shore-attached constructs.
Design considerations include local wave climate, tidal range, sediment transport, and potential impacts on downdrift erosion
Types of golfbrekers include offshore breakwaters that stand in deeper water, and nearshore or shore-attached breakwaters
Their construction can alter coastal dynamics, sometimes reducing erosion on the protected side but increasing it
Golfbrekers are part of broader coastal protection strategies, complementing groins, seawalls, and dikes.