May 15, 2017

While Bill Merrell was assessing the damage Hurricane Ike had caused to his two Galveston properties in 2008, he had a thought, which became a sketch, and then a catchy name, and now one of the best hopes to protect the Texas coast.

That thought: “The Dutch would never put up with this.”

The Dutch would not put up with $29 billion in property damage, with blocks of homes wiped off the map, majestic trees uprooted, mountains of debris and most importantly, the deaths of at least 59 people. They also wouldn’t stand for the continued threat to one of the country’s largest cities and one of the world’s most critical energy centers: Houston.

And, Merrell decided, neither should Texans.
 

Merrell's plan for a coastal spine to protect the Texas coast includes building 55 miles of dune barriers and gates at the mouth of the Houston shipping channel.

The sketch that Merrell—holder of the George P. Mitchell ’40 Chair in Marine Sciences at Texas A&M University at Galveston and the former president of the branch campus—made after this eureka moment was modeled on high-tech engineering feats he saw in the Netherlands, built to keep the North Sea out of the low-lying country. Merrell called his plan to build 55 miles of dune barriers and gates at the mouth of the Houston shipping channel a “coastal spine”. But the name that stuck was “Ike Dike,” a nod to the storm (the costliest in terms of material losses in Texas history) that made its need clear.

“This is preventive medicine,” said Merrell. “The concept is easy. You stop the storm surge at the coast so that you protect everyone.” By “everyone,” he means Galveston and Bolivar Peninsula, Houston, and all of the other vulnerable communities in between, plus the refineries and port infrastructure along the ship channel.