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Computer Programmes in the Water Field
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| For
over 25 years, BCEOM has been buying,
designing and developing scientific
software to help its experts to carry
out the studies and projects for clients,
with constant emphasis on efficiency
and quality. |
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BCEOM
employs state-of-the-art information
technology in the development of user-friendly
applications throughout the information
processing chain: data entry, formatting,
simulation, graphic interpretation
and interfacing with external analysis
tools (spreadsheets, CAD, GIS, etc.).
Using the company's human resources,
combining hydraulic and information-technology
engineering skills, BCEOM's engineers
design, develop and install dedicated
programmes (flood forecasting, optimisation
of system management, etc.).
BCEOM's tools cover all water engineering
disciplines from simple utility packages
for standard numerical calculations
to the most sophisticated models requiring
a high level of expertise by the users.
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Our
expertise
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Our
experience
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River
Hydraulics: the STREAM
programme.
A multidirectional
cell-based model to
represent complex flows
in flood plains. Entirely
developed by BCEOM,
STREAM is regularly
used to study flood
risks, development studies
(flood protection works,
the impact of new developments).
More recently, STREAM
has also been used for
flood forecasting.
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River,
Coastal, Estuarine and
Maritime Hydrodynamics:
the TELEMAC modelling
system.
Un modèle bidimensionnel
pour représenter finement
les courants, la dispersion
de la pollution et le
transport sédimentaire
dans tous les milieux
naturels.
TELEMAC est utilisé
pour la conception d'ouvrages
(ports, ponts, ouvrages
de protection en rivière
...), pour l'étude des
risques de rupture d'ouvrages,
pour les études environnementales
(émissaires de rejet,
eutrophisation des plans
d'eau, qualité des milieux
littoraux et estuariens...).
Load
Video file (.avi)
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Water
Management and Hydrology:
the AGYR programme.
This
is a semi-distributed
rainfall-runoff model
for managing water resources
in catchment basins.
Developed by BCEOM,
AGYR is used for flood
and low-water management
studies in large basins
and for designing storage
systems and forecasting
floods. It can be interfaced
with STREAM.
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Urban
hydraulics: the HYDROWORKS
programme.
This
is a reference tool
for modelling storm-water
and waste-water networks.
HYDROWORKS is an all-round
sanitation network management
tool used to make a
detailed appraisal of
how the network functions
and design and optimise
networks.
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MOISE
(developed in partnership
with CS/SI).
Installé
au centre d'annonces
de crues de Nancy, MOISE
intègre les modules
de calcul de STREAM
et AGYR et effectue
les prévisions des crues
en temps réel sur l'ensemble
du bassin de la Meuse
à partir des données
de pluie et de débit
du réseau de stations
automatisées.
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First-hand
account
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"Of Tools and Men"
Mireille
RAYMOND
"Over 15 years ago,
to have devised a detailed
hydraulics model covering
about 40 km of river
(the Tarn around Montauban)
seemed an extraordinary
achievement to us. At
the time, it was the
largest model built
using STREAM and simulating
a 3-day flood required
several hours of calculations.
Today, STREAM, which
has considerably evolved
since then, is used
as a flood forecasting
tool for major river
basins, such as the
Meuse. Only a few minutes
are required to simulate
the progress of a flood
for a period of nearly
a week along a 400-km
stretch of river. These
performance gains have
revolutionised both
study methodologies
and programme design
work for hydrological
forecasting. Until recently,
models were considered
as being reserved for
use by only a chosen
few, with their eyes
constantly pinned to
interminable listings
or to rows of figures
flashing across the
screen, as in fact,
the models only ever
produced figures!
Now, by combining models
and mapping tools, information
and documents comprehensible
by all can be produced
directly. I think that
we haven't yet fully
realised just where
this revolution can
lead us. But, we mustn't
lose sight of the fact
that even the most user-friendly
programmes are still
only tools, whereas
modelling is a technique
which requires specialist
knowledge and is really
quite an art!"
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