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Empirical Recalibration of Hunter’s Method for Peak Flow Estimation in Institutional Buildings: A Pilot Study in Data-Scarce Contexts

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Accurate estimation of peak water demand remains a challenge in institutional settings with floating populations, particularly in regions where design standards may require revision and validation to accommodate evolving consumption patterns. This pilot study assesses the potential of a probabilistic adaptation of Hunter’s method, calibrated through high-resolution flow and pressure monitoring, for peak flow estimation in five academic buildings in Loja, Ecuador. Over 62 days, usage parameters, duration (t), frequency (i), and peak period (h), were disaggregated from 1 min interval data to derive building-specific binomial probability distributions. The adapted model was compared against three benchmarks: the Neyman–Scott Rectangular Pulse Model (NSRPM), the Water Demand Calculator (WDC), and Ecuador’s Hydro-Sanitary Standard (NHE 2011). Results indicate the proposed approach estimates peak flows within −11.6% to +20.0% of observed values, outperforming WDC (systematic underestimation up to −81.5%) and NHE 2011 (average underestimation of −31.3%), though NSRPM achieved high accuracy for one site (−1.1%) with high inter-building variability (average −38.4%). While limited to a small sample in a single climatic context, this pilot demonstrates that temporal disaggregation of stochastic demand enables a context-sensitive recalibration of Hunter’s method, offering a methodologically sound basis for future validation across diverse institutional settings in the Global South.

Translated title of the contributionRecalibración Empírica del Método de Hunter para la Estimación del Caudal Pico en Edificios Institucionales: Un Estudio Piloto en Contextos con Escasez de Datos
Original languageEnglish
Article number3233
Pages (from-to)1-18
Number of pages18
JournalWater (Switzerland)
Volume17
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.

Keywords

  • data-scarce context
  • Hunter’s method
  • hydraulic design standards
  • peak flow estimation
  • pilot study
  • probabilistic modelling
  • stochastic water demand

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