Coastal morphology & sediment dynamics
Coastal morphology and sediment processes determine how shorelines evolve and how resilient they are to erosion, flooding and long‑term change. We provide evidence‑led insight into sediment pathways, beach behaviour and shoreline evolution to support planning, engineering and environmental decision‑making. Our teams design nature‑based interventions, restoration schemes, reclamation works and beneficial reuse strategies for dredged materials that enhance resilience, protect assets and support sustainable coastal development.
Climate pressures and changing sediment dynamics
Rising sea levels, stronger storms and shifting wave climates are altering sediment transport along many coastlines. These pressures influence beach levels, dune systems, estuary morphology and long‑term shoreline stability. Reduced sediment supply, coastal squeeze and human interventions often accelerate erosion. Understanding how water, wind and sediment interact across seasons, years and decades is essential for sustainable coastal management.
Challenges in erosion, shoreline change and sediment planning
Clients face complex challenges: managing erosion hotspots, restoring beaches, planning for long‑term change, and maintaining navigation or access. Sediment transport can affect the performance of coastal structures, contribute to siltation of channels, or undermine natural habitats. Reclamation projects and infrastructure development need robust evidence on sediment budgets, geomorphology and potential environmental change. Increasingly, regulators and communities expect solutions that deliver environmental, climate and social value, not just short‑term protection.
How HR Wallingford supports better coastal decision‑making
We combine coastal engineering, geomorphology, sediment science and advanced hydrodynamic modelling to understand how coastlines behave now and how they may evolve under future conditions. Our teams assess sediment pathways, beach response, storm impacts, estuarine processes and long‑term shoreline change. We support nature‑based and hybrid solutions - such as beach nourishment, dune systems, sand engines and wetlands - to enhance resilience, ecological value and sediment stability.
Reclamation and beneficial reuse of dredged materials
HR Wallingford helps clients design, evaluate and monitor reclamation schemes and beneficial reuse strategies that work with natural processes. We assess the suitability of dredged materials for beach nourishment, habitat creation, land reclamation or sediment recycling. These approaches reduce disposal costs, support circular resource use and provide climate‑positive outcomes by restoring beaches, stabilising shorelines and rebuilding natural buffers.
Monitoring, data and adaptive shoreline management
We design monitoring programmes using beach surveys, UAVs, remote sensing, wave buoys and sediment tracers. Our decision‑support tools help clients track change, manage sediment budgets and plan adaptive shoreline management strategies that remain effective as climate pressures evolve.
Coastal morphology & sediment transport expertise
Evaluate sediment pathways, beach dynamics and shoreline evolution across varied coastal settings.
Simulate waves, tides and currents to understand sediment transport and coastal response.
Assess storm impacts, long term erosion trends and beach recovery potential.
Map sources, sinks and sediment fluxes to support strategic sediment management.
Design dunes, reefs, sand engines, wetlands and stabilisation systems to enhance resilience.
Test sediment behaviour, scour and coastal structure interactions in controlled laboratory settings.
Predict long term shoreline response under climate, wave and sediment change scenarios.
Provide evidence based design and assessment of land reclamation projects.
Identify and evaluate opportunities for using dredged material in nourishment, habitat creation and restoration.
Use UAVs, sensors, remote sensing and sediment tracers to monitor shoreline and sediment change.
Evaluate how breakwaters, groynes and revetments influence sediment distribution and shoreline stability.
Assesses how sediment dynamics affect coastal habitats and ecological function.
Develop long term resilience strategies that adapt to evolving sediment and climate pressures.
Get in touch
Simon Everitt