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Big Picture
Soft engineering
• Research task
Practice Question
• 6 mark question
Managing Coasts - Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management
strategies.
Soft engineering
 managing erosion by
working with natural
processes to help restore
beaches and coastal
ecosystems.
Key
Vocabulary
Page 108 - 109
11 June 2019
 What soft engineering is.
 Examples of soft
engineering and how they
work.
 What are the benefits and
drawbacks of soft
engineering?
 Compare the types of
engineering and evaluate
their effectiveness.
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
In each section of your data collection sheet you must
include:
1.A sketch
2.How it works
3.Advantages
4.Disadvantages
Information
Collect
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Beach Nourishment
Sand and shingle from elsewhere (e.g. from the seabed) or
from lower down the beach that’s added to the upper part
of beaches
A wider beach means more room for beach users. People
living along the sea front are more protected from coastal
flooding.
At Sandbanks, the wider nourished beach protects
expensive properties.
X Taking material from the seabed can
kill organisms and destroy habitats
X It’s expensive as it has to be
repeated.
X Although cheaper than hard
engineering options, this has high
overheads as it costs around £300
000 to hire a dredger.
 Creates wider beaches
which slow the waves
 A nourished beach is
natural and blends in
with the environment.
 Wider beach attracts
tourists.
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Produced by Mr M Colclough
Managing coasts - soft engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Beach Nourishment
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Dune Stabilising
Creating or restoring sand dunes by either nourishment,
or by planting vegetation to stabilise the sand. Marram
grass is a species that is adapted to growing in sand, and
its roots help hold the dunes together and prevent the
sand being blown away.
Sand dunes protect land uses behind them. Once
established they are popular for picnics and walking on.
At Studland sand dunes, regeneration has helped
maintain a habitat for rare Dartford warblers and
nightjars. Six species of reptiles including lizards and
adders inhabit the dunes.
Small planting projects often use volunteer labour and
local grass for transplants so costs are minimal.
 Sand dunes provide a
barrier between the
land and the sea.
 Wave energy is
absorbed with
prevents flooding and
erosion.
 Stabilisation is cheap
X The protection is
limited to a small area
X Nourishment is very
expensive
X Dune regeneration has
to be checked twice a
year and have fertilisers
applied.
X While becoming
established, regenerated
sand dunes are fenced
off and signs tell people
to keep out. This may
deter tourists.
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Produced by Mr M Colclough
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Dune Stabilising
Managing Coasts – Soft
Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Beach Reprofiling
Beach reprofiling is the artificial re-shaping of a beach
using existing beach material. In winter, a beach is
lowered by destructive waves. After winter storms,
bulldozers move sand and shingle back up the beach. Like
beach nourishment, reprofiling ensure that the beach is
large enough to be an effective buffer between land and
sea.
The combined cost of beach nourishment and beach
reprofiling at Pevensey, East Sussex is £30 million over 25
years.
 The residential area
behind the beach is
now protected so
residents feel safe.
 By using the material
from the beach, it
still looks reasonably
natural.
 Provides an effective
buffer for the
coastline
X A steep, high crested
beach may look unnatural
and uninviting to tourists.
X Major reprofiling costs
can be expensive.
X This has to be done
regularly to be effective
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Beach Reprofiling
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Managed Realignment
Managed retreat (also called coastal realignment) involves removing current defences and
allowing the sea to flood the land behind.
Over time the land becomes marshland, which then protects the land behind from flooding
and erosion.
It is a cheap and easy strategy, and it doesn’t need maintaining. The marshland can also create
new habitats for plants and animals.
Because land is lost to the sea, choosing areas to flood can cause conflicts, e.g. flooding
farmland would affect the livelihood of farmers. The saltwater can also have a negative effect
on existing ecosystems.
 Land becomes marsh,
slowing waves and
reducing erosion
 Created new habitats
 Cheap and easy, does
not need maintaining.
X Land is lost to the sea
eventually
X Choosing which areas to
flood can cause conflict
with local communities
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Exam Practice: Describe how soft
engineering methods are used to protect
coastal areas. Use an example you have
studied. [6 marks + 3 SPaG]
Read the guidance below the answer space
to work out what you should be putting in
your exam answer.
Answer the Question on your sheet.
Use examples and
evidence. E.g. costs,
materials used
Exam Practice
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
1. Glue it in the centre
of a page
2. Around the edge
point out good
features about the
answer
Use the model answer that
you have been given:
A Model Answer
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Practice Question: Identify the differences between hard and soft engineering
coastal management strategies (4)
L1 (1-2) – Points are general and not developed. No comparative
language has been used.
L2 (3-4) – Both soft and hard engineering strategies have been
considered. Comparative language has been used.
Answer the Question below.
Use examples and
evidence. E.g. costs,
materials used
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
Answer the Question below.
Identify the differences between hard and soft engineering coastal management
strategies (4)
Hard engineering strategies such as sea walls and rock armour tend to be
more expensive (1) with sea walls costing around £5000 per metre (1) and
rock armour is often imported from Sweden or Norway, adding to the cost
substantially (1). However soft engineering strategies such as sand dune
stabilising is relatively cheap as local grass and volunteer labour is often
used (1). Strategies such as dune regeneration tend to be more
environmentally friendly (1). At Studland sand dunes, regeneration has
helped maintain a habitat for the rare Dartford warblers and nightjars (1)
whereas damaged gabions are unsightly and seabirds may damage their
feet in them (1).
Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering
LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.

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11. soft engineering

  • 1. Big Picture Soft engineering • Research task Practice Question • 6 mark question Managing Coasts - Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies. Soft engineering  managing erosion by working with natural processes to help restore beaches and coastal ecosystems. Key Vocabulary Page 108 - 109 11 June 2019
  • 2.  What soft engineering is.  Examples of soft engineering and how they work.  What are the benefits and drawbacks of soft engineering?  Compare the types of engineering and evaluate their effectiveness. Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 3. In each section of your data collection sheet you must include: 1.A sketch 2.How it works 3.Advantages 4.Disadvantages Information Collect Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 4. Beach Nourishment Sand and shingle from elsewhere (e.g. from the seabed) or from lower down the beach that’s added to the upper part of beaches A wider beach means more room for beach users. People living along the sea front are more protected from coastal flooding. At Sandbanks, the wider nourished beach protects expensive properties. X Taking material from the seabed can kill organisms and destroy habitats X It’s expensive as it has to be repeated. X Although cheaper than hard engineering options, this has high overheads as it costs around £300 000 to hire a dredger.  Creates wider beaches which slow the waves  A nourished beach is natural and blends in with the environment.  Wider beach attracts tourists. Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 5. Produced by Mr M Colclough Managing coasts - soft engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 6. Beach Nourishment Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 7. Dune Stabilising Creating or restoring sand dunes by either nourishment, or by planting vegetation to stabilise the sand. Marram grass is a species that is adapted to growing in sand, and its roots help hold the dunes together and prevent the sand being blown away. Sand dunes protect land uses behind them. Once established they are popular for picnics and walking on. At Studland sand dunes, regeneration has helped maintain a habitat for rare Dartford warblers and nightjars. Six species of reptiles including lizards and adders inhabit the dunes. Small planting projects often use volunteer labour and local grass for transplants so costs are minimal.  Sand dunes provide a barrier between the land and the sea.  Wave energy is absorbed with prevents flooding and erosion.  Stabilisation is cheap X The protection is limited to a small area X Nourishment is very expensive X Dune regeneration has to be checked twice a year and have fertilisers applied. X While becoming established, regenerated sand dunes are fenced off and signs tell people to keep out. This may deter tourists. Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 8. Produced by Mr M Colclough Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 9. Dune Stabilising Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 10. Beach Reprofiling Beach reprofiling is the artificial re-shaping of a beach using existing beach material. In winter, a beach is lowered by destructive waves. After winter storms, bulldozers move sand and shingle back up the beach. Like beach nourishment, reprofiling ensure that the beach is large enough to be an effective buffer between land and sea. The combined cost of beach nourishment and beach reprofiling at Pevensey, East Sussex is £30 million over 25 years.  The residential area behind the beach is now protected so residents feel safe.  By using the material from the beach, it still looks reasonably natural.  Provides an effective buffer for the coastline X A steep, high crested beach may look unnatural and uninviting to tourists. X Major reprofiling costs can be expensive. X This has to be done regularly to be effective Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 11. Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 12. Beach Reprofiling Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 13. Managed Realignment Managed retreat (also called coastal realignment) involves removing current defences and allowing the sea to flood the land behind. Over time the land becomes marshland, which then protects the land behind from flooding and erosion. It is a cheap and easy strategy, and it doesn’t need maintaining. The marshland can also create new habitats for plants and animals. Because land is lost to the sea, choosing areas to flood can cause conflicts, e.g. flooding farmland would affect the livelihood of farmers. The saltwater can also have a negative effect on existing ecosystems.  Land becomes marsh, slowing waves and reducing erosion  Created new habitats  Cheap and easy, does not need maintaining. X Land is lost to the sea eventually X Choosing which areas to flood can cause conflict with local communities Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 14. Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 15. Exam Practice: Describe how soft engineering methods are used to protect coastal areas. Use an example you have studied. [6 marks + 3 SPaG] Read the guidance below the answer space to work out what you should be putting in your exam answer. Answer the Question on your sheet. Use examples and evidence. E.g. costs, materials used Exam Practice Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 16. 1. Glue it in the centre of a page 2. Around the edge point out good features about the answer Use the model answer that you have been given: A Model Answer Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 17. Practice Question: Identify the differences between hard and soft engineering coastal management strategies (4) L1 (1-2) – Points are general and not developed. No comparative language has been used. L2 (3-4) – Both soft and hard engineering strategies have been considered. Comparative language has been used. Answer the Question below. Use examples and evidence. E.g. costs, materials used Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.
  • 18. Answer the Question below. Identify the differences between hard and soft engineering coastal management strategies (4) Hard engineering strategies such as sea walls and rock armour tend to be more expensive (1) with sea walls costing around £5000 per metre (1) and rock armour is often imported from Sweden or Norway, adding to the cost substantially (1). However soft engineering strategies such as sand dune stabilising is relatively cheap as local grass and volunteer labour is often used (1). Strategies such as dune regeneration tend to be more environmentally friendly (1). At Studland sand dunes, regeneration has helped maintain a habitat for the rare Dartford warblers and nightjars (1) whereas damaged gabions are unsightly and seabirds may damage their feet in them (1). Managing Coasts – Soft Engineering LO: To assess the costs and benefits of soft engineering management strategies.

Editor's Notes

  • #4: Use the information on desks or as posters around the room. Pupils complete sheet using the information sheets/posters.
  • #17: AFTER CLASS HAS ATTEMPTED EXAM QUESTION: Give model answer and get them to write themselves a guide to ‘getting full marks in a 6 mark question’ IF THERE IS TIME!