ewmon Posted March 15, 2012 Posted March 15, 2012 I'm trying to write a letter and I need the name of those concrete structures, apparently mostly in cities, that act like canals to channel excessive water caused by storms; otherwise they are dry. In the movies, kids ride their bikes in them or car chases end up in them, both of which are probably illegal in real life. This is embarrassing ... any help out there? I know what will happen. As soon as I read the name that someone supplies, I'll recognize it immediately. Thanks!
hypervalent_iodine Posted March 15, 2012 Posted March 15, 2012 Well, in Australia we have storm water drains to do that - is that what you're after? Edit: the pictures on wiki don't look like what you're talking about, but I think they are the same thing. I don't think the giant, open-topped concrete things are particularly common.
ewmon Posted March 15, 2012 Author Posted March 15, 2012 Okay, "flood control channel" sounds close to what I'm thinking, so I'll give it a ½ or even ¾ of a . Are there common, vernacular expressions for them? GOOGLE HITS -- NAME 2,200 K -- flood control channel 370 K -- flood channel 102 K -- flood canal 43 K -- flood control canal 25 K -- flood control ditch 10 K – storm ditch 7 K – storm canal Okay, at 80% of the hits, "flood control channel" receives top honors . Unfortunately, none of these names as well as "drainage ditch" (too far afield, literally) and "storm channel" (too ambiguous, sounds like the TV station to turn to for weather forecasts) seems exactly what I was thinking of, except for "flood canal" and "storm canal" (which add up to a lousy 4%). I would say that one of these is what I was thinking of. Apparently, my recall isn't what it used to be. (Please call our 800 number for customer service. Thank you, and have a nice day.) Thanks Spyman and hypervalent_iodine.
Phi for All Posted March 15, 2012 Posted March 15, 2012 Culvert is another word they use for the wide, open-topped concrete drainage channels in Los Angeles (although most people in LA just call it the River). Most culverts are closed at the top and aren't very long.
Acme Posted March 22, 2012 Posted March 22, 2012 (edited) I was thinking "swale". Usually a flood control swale has a grassy/earthen bottom however. ?? Stormwater Management Edited March 22, 2012 by Acme
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