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A roof node represents a physical roof catchment surface. The roof model has no infiltration and quickly produces surface runoff during a rainfall event. You must specify a catchment area, time of concentration for the roof catchment, maximum depression storage, and what percentage of the roof area is connected to a rainwater harvesting tank.

Restrictions

The roof node surface area must be >= 0, and should be <= 1000 m2. For roof areas larger than 1000 m2, use two or more roof nodes.

There are restrictions on which node inputs and outputs you can connect together. See Urban Developer node connection rules.

Node Inputs

There are no node inputs (ie nothing is "upstream" of a roof); however climate inputs, such as rainfall and evapotranspiration, and design rainfall settings, are applied to the node.

Node Outputs

  • Runoff to Tank: Runoff quantity is proportional to the % of roof connected to tank.
    Link type: Runoff
  • Bypass Runoff: Other runoff; not connected to a tank.
    Link type: Runoff

Node Properties

InputDescriptionUnitsDefault ValueRecommended RangeConstraints
Node nameIdentifying name for the roof. The name must be unique.NANANANA
Roof area

Total area of the roof.

Urban Developer does not enforce a maximum area for this node type, however, the algorithms used to determine the hydrologic response (particularly peak flow) are not accurate for areas greater than 1000 m2 or flow path lengths longer than around 50 m. It is unlikely that you will have one roof node of 1000 m2 or greater flowing to a single downpipe. You canduplicate roof nodes if necessary.

m2350[1, 1000]> 0
Time of concentrationThe time of concentration represents the time taken for surface runoff to travel from the most hydraulically-remote point on the roof to the roof outlet.min2>1> 0
Average depression storage depth

Represents the depth of the roof area’s depression storage (in millimetres) satisfied in a rainfall event, before surface runoff occurs.

In practical terms, maximum depression storage in the roof node represents the small amount of loss that occurs due to surface irregularities, water absorbed by debris in the gutters or in rust holes in the roof. It is a way of modelling the reality that you never see 100% of rainfall from a roof surface ending up as runoff, although runoff will usually be close to 100%.

mm1NA100
Percent of roof connected to tankSome roofs may have only a proportion of runoff directed to a tank, with the remainder being directed to stormwater or domestic garden use.%100NA[0, 100]
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