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waterkering

Waterkering is a term used in the Netherlands and other Dutch-speaking regions to refer to a structure or system that protects land from the encroachment of water. A waterkering can be a dike or dyke, a dam, a levee, or a flood barrier that blocks, controls or channels water to prevent flooding, regulate water levels, and protect inhabited areas, agricultural land, and infrastructure.

Common components include embankments (dikes), sea walls, sluices, gates, and pumping stations. In low-lying areas behind

Storm surge barriers and movable gates are large-scale waterkerings designed to withstand extreme events. Notable examples

Waterkeringen are designed considering geography, tides, storm intensity, rainfall, evaporation, and climate change. Maintenance, monitoring, and

See also: dike, flood barrier, storm surge barrier, sluice.

a
waterkering,
water
levels
are
managed
with
polders,
which
require
controlled
drainage
and
pumping
to
maintain
dry
land.
are
the
Oosterscheldekering,
a
network
of
movable
sluice
gates
protecting
the
Zeeland
estuaries
(completed
1986),
and
the
Maeslantkering,
a
movable
storm-surge
barrier
near
Rotterdam
(completed
1997).
The
Afsluitdijk,
completed
in
1932,
encloses
the
former
Zuiderzee
to
create
the
IJsselmeer.
These
projects
illustrate
the
Dutch
approach
to
adaptive
flood
protection
that
combines
barriers,
drainage,
and
water
level
management.
emergency
planning
are
essential
to
ensure
reliability.
Similar
concepts
exist
worldwide,
including
levees,
dams,
and
flood
barriers,
adapted
to
local
hydrological
conditions.