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Design of the Gold Coast reef for surfing, public amenity and coastal protection: surfing aspects

Kerry Blackt, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2001 - 
- pp 115-130
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TLDR
The first offshore reef developed to amalgamate world-class surfing, public amenity and coastal protection is described in this paper, where the shape that met the design criteria, for both the surfing and shoreline protection characteristics, was found to be a submerged double-sided headland.
Abstract
The first offshore reef developed to amalgamate world-class surfing, public amenity and coastal protection is described. The reef is at Narrowneck Beach on the Gold Coast, Australia, a long, sandy coast experiencing large cyclone waves and high net longshore transport. The reef design was based on bathymetric and wave breaking studies of world-class surfing breaks and numerical model predictions. A broad range of different shapes was numerically tested using refraction, Boussinesq refraction/diffraction and sediment transport models. The shape that met the design criteria, for both the surfing and shoreline protection characteristics, was found to be a submerged double-sided headland. The designed reef is 400 m long and extends from the natural 2 m isobath to a toe in 10.4 m depth, with the crest at 0.4 m below the Lowest Astronomical Tide. The shape allowed both 'left' and 'right' surfing waves to be included. Peel angles are rarely less than 40? (in predominant small waves) and seabed gradients of up to 1:12 produce steep plunging wave faces, making the surfing wave 'fast' and 'hollow'. In small swell, a large, focussing underwater segment will more than double the deep water wave height at the breakpoint. A slower 100 m long segment at the shoreward end is designed for surfing beginners and casual tourists. Because the adjacent beaches experience close-out conditions in big swells, a paddling channel has been placed at the offshore tip of the reef to give surfers access during large swell. A lagoon shoreward of the reef provides sheltered paddling and, at low tide, sheltered swimming for beach-goers. Wave interference patterns inshore of the reef are expected to provide challenging 'wedgey' waves for body boarders, while the offshore placement of the reef provides ideal wave jumping conditions for the sailboarder.

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Citations
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Morphodynamics of intermediate beaches: a video imaging and numerical modelling study

TL;DR: Wright et al. as mentioned in this paper developed a phenomenological scheme based on surf zone properties for the classification of the four intermediate beach states [low tide terrace (LTT), transverse bar rip (TBR), rhythmic bar beach (RBB), and longshore bar trough (LBT)] identified by Wright, L.D., Short, A.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shoreline response to multi-functional artificial surfing reefs: A numerical and physical modelling study

TL;DR: In this article, the results of a series of 2DH numerical and 3D scaled physical modelling tests indicate that processes governing the response of the shoreline response to submerged structures, such as artificial surfing reefs, are different from those associated with emergent offshore breakwaters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Research-Based Surfing Literature for Coastal Management and the Science of Surfing—A Review

TL;DR: A review of research-based surfing literature is undertaken to provide a summary of information available to assist in coastal management decision-making around surfing breaks as discussed by the authors, which is required to protect the seabed features and oceanographic processes that create surfing waves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Case studies showing the growth and development of geotextile sand containers: an australian perspective

TL;DR: Soil Filters Australia Pty Ltd has been involved in the manufacture and installation of geotextile containers in a variety of forms since early 1984, this relates to 17 years experience in the field as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Implications of Coastal Protection and Development on Surfing

TL;DR: The impact of coastal protection on surfing resources is poorly understood and rarely quantified prior to construction as discussed by the authors, and there is an increased requirement for surfing resources worldwide as participation levels in the sport grow There is also an increased need for coastal protection as the occupancy in the coastal zone increases.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wave-driven flow over shallow reefs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show a strong correlation between offshore rms incident wave height and cross-reef currents at subtidal frequencies and propose analytical solutions for flow forced by wave breaking over an idealized reef.

Predicting the Breaking Intensity of Surfing Waves

TL;DR: In this article, a method for predicting and describing the breaking intensity of plunging surfing waves has been developed, which uses the orthogonal seabed gradient to predict the wave vortex length to width ratio, which was found to be the best indicator of wave breaking intensity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coastal erosion and the sediment budget, with special reference to the gold coast, Australia

TL;DR: The Gold Coast budget is unusual in that it is longshore transport dominated but receives little or no sand from freshly weathered rock; sand is palimpsest and is derived from erosion of Pleistocene beach ridge systems well updrift as discussed by the authors.

Gold Coast Longshore Transport

TL;DR: The results of the recent study differed significantly from those obtained previously and showed that there is no net longshore transport differential in the area but rather that the Gold Coast's long term erosion problems are associated with the affects of the Tweed River training walls as mentioned in this paper.

Designing the Shape of the Gold Coast Reef: Sediment Dynamics

Kerry Black
TL;DR: In this article, a double-sided headland was designed to control a nourished beach alignment and improve surfing quality at Narrowneck Beach on Australia's Gold Coast, and the final shape, patterns of sedimentation around the reef and effects on adjacent beaches were numerically simulated for 17 different cases of wave height, wave direction and tidal level.
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