Author
Listed:
- Seung-Jun Lee
(Geodesy Laboratory, Civil & Architectural and Environmental System Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU), Suwon 16419, Republic of Korea)
- Tae-Yun Kim
(Geodesy Laboratory, Civil & Architectural and Environmental System Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU), Suwon 16419, Republic of Korea)
- Jisung Kim
(School of Geography, Faculty of Environment, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK)
- Hong-Sik Yun
(Geodesy Laboratory, Civil & Architectural and Environmental System Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU), Suwon 16419, Republic of Korea)
Abstract
The Yeongnam wildfires in March 2025 destroyed over 40 temple halls across five Buddhist monasteries in South Korea, exposing a critical gap in wildfire management for mountain-sited cultural heritage: the existing approaches rely on static hazard maps and reactive suppression, lacking real-time terrain-aware prediction and proactive resource deployment. This study proposes a Digital Twin framework coupling high-resolution wildfire simulation with adaptive water-mist optimization to address this gap. Bogwangsa Temple (est. 949 CE, ~315 m elevation, Cheonmasan Mountain, Namyangju) serves as the case study, selected for its representative vulnerability—dense Pinus densiflora forests on steep western slopes forming a continuous fire corridor, limited vehicular access, and proximity to recent large-scale fire events. A modified Rothermel model on a 1 m cellular-automata grid, driven by a 1 m DEM, Korea Forest Service fuel data, and local weather records, simulates five scenarios from normal spring to extreme dry-wind conditions through Monte Carlo ensembles. Binary integer optimization selects the minimum-cost nozzle configuration, keeping the fire-arrival probability at four heritage structures below a safety threshold via pre-emptive activation. The adaptive deployment reduces the mean fire-arrival probability by approximately 80% compared with static sprinklers while substantially lowering water consumption. Sensitivity analyses confirm that 1 m DEM resolution captures micro-terrain features that are critical to accurate spread prediction that are lost at coarser resolutions. The modular, transferable framework contributes to SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities, Target 11.4) and SDG 13 (Climate Action).
Suggested Citation
Seung-Jun Lee & Tae-Yun Kim & Jisung Kim & Hong-Sik Yun, 2026.
"Digital Twin-Based Wildfire Simulation on a 1 m DEM and Adaptive Water-Mist Optimization for Heritage Protection: Bogwangsa Temple, South Korea,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(8), pages 1-30, April.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:8:p:3835-:d:1918907
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